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men_s_basketball:big_east [2010/12/23 18:47]
TallTitan34
men_s_basketball:big_east [2010/12/23 18:48]
TallTitan34
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 About a decade after the conference's inception, Big East members decided to become a major football conference and thus added five schools including four-time champion [[Miami]], [[Temple]], [[Virginia Tech]], [[West Virginia]], and [[Rutgers]]. [[Penn State]] joined the Big Ten Conference. The inaugural Big East football season launched in 1991.  [[West Virginia]] and [[Rutgers]] were football-only members until 1995, [[Virginia Tech]] was a football-only member until 2001, with [[Temple]] remaining a football-only member until 2004, after failing to attract enough consistent fan support. The Big East offered [[Notre Dame]] a non-football membership effective 1995. This led to an unusual conference structure with some schools competing in Division I basketball only. About a decade after the conference's inception, Big East members decided to become a major football conference and thus added five schools including four-time champion [[Miami]], [[Temple]], [[Virginia Tech]], [[West Virginia]], and [[Rutgers]]. [[Penn State]] joined the Big Ten Conference. The inaugural Big East football season launched in 1991.  [[West Virginia]] and [[Rutgers]] were football-only members until 1995, [[Virginia Tech]] was a football-only member until 2001, with [[Temple]] remaining a football-only member until 2004, after failing to attract enough consistent fan support. The Big East offered [[Notre Dame]] a non-football membership effective 1995. This led to an unusual conference structure with some schools competing in Division I basketball only.
    
-This had long led to rumors of instability, and in 2003, ongoing press reports of tensions between the football schools and the basketball schools finally exploded into a months-long public tug-of-war between the Big East and the Atlantic Coast Conference over several Big East members. The end result was that three Big East schools — [[Virginia Tech]], [[Miami]] and [[Boston College]] — moved to the ACC, while five teams moved to the Big East from Conference USA — [[Louisville]], [[Cincinnati]], [[South Florida]], Marquette, and [[DePaul]]. +{{  men_s_basketball:big_east_teams.jpg?200}}This had long led to rumors of instability, and in 2003, ongoing press reports of tensions between the football schools and the basketball schools finally exploded into a months-long public tug-of-war between the Big East and the Atlantic Coast Conference over several Big East members. The end result was that three Big East schools — [[Virginia Tech]], [[Miami]] and [[Boston College]] — moved to the ACC, while five teams moved to the Big East from Conference USA — [[Louisville]], [[Cincinnati]], [[South Florida]], Marquette, and [[DePaul]]. 
  
 The addition of the three football schools, along with Big East non-football member [[Connecticut]] moving up to the Big East football conference, ensured that the league would keep the minimum eight teams needed to keep its BCS bid. In addition two traditional basketball teams, [[DePaul]] and Marquette, were added to gain the Chicago and Milwaukee television markets and help the already solid basketball status of the conference. The addition of the three football schools, along with Big East non-football member [[Connecticut]] moving up to the Big East football conference, ensured that the league would keep the minimum eight teams needed to keep its BCS bid. In addition two traditional basketball teams, [[DePaul]] and Marquette, were added to gain the Chicago and Milwaukee television markets and help the already solid basketball status of the conference.
men_s_basketball/big_east.txt · Last modified: 2020/12/07 16:49 (external edit)