The Real Reason The Big Ten Added Maryland and Rutgers – Survival
Slow
population growth throughout the Midwest is threatening the Big Ten talent
pipeline and fan base.
Brian Cook lives in Ann Arbor and is the founder of the popular Michigan
fan site MGoBlog.com, yet he's in no rush to drive the two miles from his house
to the Big House this season. The Wolverines' home conference schedule
consists of four teams -- Minnesota, Penn State, Indiana and newcomer
Maryland -- that failed to crack the final top 50 of the Sagarin ratings
last season. Michigan has been sending emails pleading with fans to renew their
season tickets. "It seems like they keep pushing and pushing to see what
our breaking point is," Cook says of the conferences's power brokers.
"They keep doing things they know people will hate."
It has been
19 months since the nation's oldest conference stunned both its fans and
the industry by extending invites to football afterthoughts Maryland and
Rutgers. As their July 1 arrival draws near, Big Ten commissioner and
South Orange, N.J., native Jim Delany has been building bridges to the
East. In May he held press conferences on consecutive days in New York
City and Washington, first to trumpet a new basketball series with the
Big East starting in 2015, then to announce that the conference tournament
-- always held in Indianapolis or Chicago -- will relocate to D.C. in 2017. The
Chicago-based conference has opened a second office in Manhattan. "We're a
two-region conference now," he says. "We're not going to visit the
East. We're going to live in the East."
That doesn't
sit well with many folks back in the Midwest. "What an absolute slap in
the face to all the people who support Big Ten athletics," one
Michigan fan tweeted about the basketball tournament move.
Nearly a
quarter century has passed since Delany, 66, roiled traditionalists and set off
a generation of conference shuffling with the then revolutionary addition of
Penn State. He engendered skepticism again in 2007 when he launched the
Big Ten Network, the first conference television channel. But the
incorporation of Maryland and Rutgers is both the boldest and most divisive initiative
of his 25-year tenure. On the one hand, this expansion could yield lucrative
cable subscriber fees and open new recruiting territory. On the other, it could
alienate the existing fan base and further dilute an already struggling
football league. "The Big Ten brand has not atrophied, but you can
argue that other brands, like the SEC, have accelerated past it," said
David Carter, executive director of USC's Sports Business Institute. "If
you don't do something, you're in trouble." Delany is betting that something is a pair of institutions light on
football cachet and heavy on potential.
Maryland and
Rutgers went a combined 13-13 last season. The Terrapins last finished in the
AP top 10 in 1976; the Scarlet Knights never have. "Ohio State fans
in particular are sick of having to defend the league after winning 24 straight
[2012 and '13] and still not getting the respect it deserves," said Luke
Zimmermann, founder of the Buckeyes blog Land Grant Holy Land. "This is
not in their mind anything more than adding another Indiana or Purdue."
To which
Delany says, "That's not a compelling comment to me. If the standard for
expansion is you have to bring in Nebraska or Penn State, no one's ever
going to expand. There's only a couple of those out there." In his vision
Rutgers and Maryland will soon develop into big-time football programs in large
part because big-time football is now coming to them. Season-ticket sales are
up 25% at each school mainly because Rutgers is now hosting Penn State and
Michigan instead of Cincinnati and South Florida, while Maryland's last ACC
home game was against Boston College but its first Big Ten visitor
will be Ohio State. Nearly a half-million Big Ten alums live from
New York to Virginia, and the two newcomers will add a half-million more in
that area.
Most of all,
Delany believes the conference had no choice. As the Big Ten's population
moves South and West, the conference's base is rapidly shrinking: Illinois,
Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Iowa all rank among the
12 states with the smallest projected growth from 2000 to '30. Meanwhile,
between June '10, when Nebraska joined the Big Ten and Colorado and Utah joined
the Pac-12, and the Maryland and Rutgers announcements in November '12,
the SEC added Texas A&M and Missouri, and most important, the ACC
delivered a death knell to the Big East, poaching Syracuse, Pittsburgh
and, as a partial member, Delany's long-coveted target, Notre Dame. The
Big Ten, which had long claimed the most populous footprint of any
conference, suddenly ranked a distant third. And with Syracuse, Pitt and Notre
Dame, the ACC had moved directly into the neighborhood. A still unfolding
lawsuit filed last year by Maryland against the ACC over the league's
$52 million exit fee claims that representatives from two ACC schools,
acting on the conference's behalf, contacted two Big Ten schools about
joining. "That's when it changed," says Delany. "Once people
start getting on our doorstep and calling our institutions, then I think it's
important to be able to be offensive and defensive. We came to the conclusion
there was more risk in sitting still than there was in exploring other
opportunities."
*****
On a late
March morning Julie Hermann takes a seat in a meeting room at The Hale Center,
Rutgers's football facility. Hermann arrived from Louisville after basketball
coach Mike Rice was fired and AD Tim Pernetti left after video of Rice
berating, throwing balls at and kicking his players surfaced. Since taking over
she's had to deal with the revelation that the new basketball coach, Eddie
Jordan, never actually graduated from the university, as well as several
self-inflicted controversies arising from her misstatements to the press and
brusque manner, damning enough that the Asbury Park Press ran an editorial headlined, RUTGERS ATHLETIC
DIRECTOR IS PR NIGHTMARE.
The bigger
problem for Hermann is the state of her department's finances. The university
had a deficit of $190 million in athletics from 2004-05 through 2011-12,
and a staggering $47 million in 2012-13, which is in part due to a variety
of one-time expenses. Rutgers will accumulate another $183 million in
deficit by 2022, but buoyed by an expected influx of Big Ten cash, the
school believes it will be budget-neutral after that. Both Big Ten and
school officials tout Rutgers's academic credentials as one of its biggest
draws -- it's the only public school in the top 10% of the NCAA's Academic
Progress Rate for FBS football programs for the past seven years. As proud as
he is of the achievement, school president Robert Barchi concedes the subsidies
are "siphoning dollars off from the academic mission." Hermann will
need even more money, presumably from private donors, to fulfill her vision of
drastically upgrading the Scarlet Knights' long-neglected facilities. "Build,
build, build," says Hermann, 50, whose Louisville mentor, AD Tom Jurich,
engineered nearly $150 million in facility upgrades during her
15 years there. "If we don't have a crane up, I'm not a happy
person."
Rutgers has
never played in a New Year's bowl, but former coach Greg Schiano turned
the once woeful program into a regular postseason participant, with eight bowl
trips in the past nine seasons, including the last two under Schiano's
successor, Kyle Flood. At its zenith, Nov. 9, 2006, 8-0 Rutgers, led by
running back Ray Rice, knocked off third-ranked 8-0 Louisville 28-25 on a night
the Empire State Building was lit in scarlet. Flood is most likely coaching for
his job after a disappointing 6-7 finish in 2013 and a disastrous recruiting
cycle in which 12 prospects decommitted. But football is a powerhouse compared
with men's basketball; Rutgers hasn't reached the NCAA tournament since 1991.
In its last game pre-Big Ten, the Knights were humiliated by Louisville
92-31 in the AAC tournament quarterfinals. "As much as that was not fun, I
was probably bothered by it the least," says Hermann, "because I know
exactly what it takes to be what Louisville is. With the resources and the
power of New Jersey, I believe if everyone's all in behind their flagship
university, over the next decade this is absolutely the next superstory of
college sports." Look closely, and it's possible to see what Hermann's
talking about. Rutgers has had success in women's basketball, including two
Final Four appearances (2000 and '07) and a win in last year's WNIT, while its
wrestling program is on the rise, with two top 25 and one top 10
finish since 2009.
No comments:
Post a Comment