7StraightIsGreat
Well-Known Member
https://espn.go.com/college-sports/story/_/id/7396843/big-ten-pac-12-grow-scheduling-partnership
So the Pac 12 and Big 10 have now entered into an agreement that will allow for crossover scheduling in all sports. Due to contracts, it will take football a little while longer to be on board, but within 5 years each Pac 12 school will have 1 Big 10 school on the schedule. This even furthers my belief that the Utah-BYU rivalry will go away.
At first, that seems unthinkable, but if you look at what we currently know it doesn't seem like a stretch at all: Chris Hill has made it clear that he'd like to see Utah adopt a yearly schedule that included 7 home games (very hard to do if you're playing a yearly home-and-home with BYU). He has also made it clear that with Utah playing 9 conference games each year, he'd like to see the 3 out of conference games include 1 "big" game with 2 cupakes mixed in. Also the fact that the Utah-BYU series is only under contract for 1 more game is very telling IMO. I could easily see Utah's "big" out of conference game becoming the yearly match-up with a Big 10 school. That only leaves 2 out of conference games and I'm sure Utah is very wary about over-scheduling their program.
This is going to sound somewhat snotty, but I really don't mean it to: Sometime in the near future, Utah could be looking at a schedule that includes: USC, Oregon, Stanford, Washington and the likes of Nebraska, Michigan, Ohio State, etc. At that point, don't you want 2 cupcakes on the schedule? Not only that, but do you really even need to play BYU with a schedule like that? For a BYU fan that takes offense to that line of thinking, all I ask of you is to picture BYU in the same scenario. Lets say BYU had gotten into the BIG 12 and then they announced a partnership with the SEC. If BYU had 10 games per year already lined up with Big 12 and SEC opponents, does it make much sense for them to be scheduling a very losable game against a Pac 12 school?
So the Pac 12 and Big 10 have now entered into an agreement that will allow for crossover scheduling in all sports. Due to contracts, it will take football a little while longer to be on board, but within 5 years each Pac 12 school will have 1 Big 10 school on the schedule. This even furthers my belief that the Utah-BYU rivalry will go away.
At first, that seems unthinkable, but if you look at what we currently know it doesn't seem like a stretch at all: Chris Hill has made it clear that he'd like to see Utah adopt a yearly schedule that included 7 home games (very hard to do if you're playing a yearly home-and-home with BYU). He has also made it clear that with Utah playing 9 conference games each year, he'd like to see the 3 out of conference games include 1 "big" game with 2 cupakes mixed in. Also the fact that the Utah-BYU series is only under contract for 1 more game is very telling IMO. I could easily see Utah's "big" out of conference game becoming the yearly match-up with a Big 10 school. That only leaves 2 out of conference games and I'm sure Utah is very wary about over-scheduling their program.
This is going to sound somewhat snotty, but I really don't mean it to: Sometime in the near future, Utah could be looking at a schedule that includes: USC, Oregon, Stanford, Washington and the likes of Nebraska, Michigan, Ohio State, etc. At that point, don't you want 2 cupcakes on the schedule? Not only that, but do you really even need to play BYU with a schedule like that? For a BYU fan that takes offense to that line of thinking, all I ask of you is to picture BYU in the same scenario. Lets say BYU had gotten into the BIG 12 and then they announced a partnership with the SEC. If BYU had 10 games per year already lined up with Big 12 and SEC opponents, does it make much sense for them to be scheduling a very losable game against a Pac 12 school?