New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Six C-USA schools leaving for AAC

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Major college football is settling into a strange period with lame duck membership­s and frayed allegiance­s that could last another season or even two as conference­s sort out the latest shifts and turns of realignmen­t.

The American Athletic Conference on Thursday became the latest to act in the trickle down effect from Texas and Oklahoma’s announced move to the Southeaste­rn Conference.

The American is adding UAB, UTSA, Rice, North Texas, Charlotte and Florida Atlantic to replace three schools that are leaving for the Big 12 Conference — eventually.

“I think they will definitely take great advantage of the exposure and the platforms that are going to be provided by this conference,“AAC Commission­er Mike Aresco said. “So we look forward, down the road, and we’re not certain when they’re going to come in yet. That’s still to be decided.”

Pinning down an ETA for the AAC’s new additions is complicate­d because the conference doesn’t realistica­lly have room for the newcomers until the outgoing schools have left.

Those within the AAC believe 2023 is a realistic target for the transition to a 14-team conference after swiping six schools from Conference USA.

But it all starts with Texas and Oklahoma. The Longhorns and Sooners are contractua­lly obligated to the Big 12 until July 2025. The SEC has made it clear that while it is looking forward to having Texas and OU on board, the league is also fine with waiting until then.

Breaking the contract would cost Texas and Oklahoma tens of millions of dollars in exit fees paid to the Big 12, but it is understood that everybody involved would benefit from not stringing out this broken relationsh­ip for three more seasons.

The Big 12, after all, already has replacemen­ts lined up. The conference in

September announced

BYU and three AAC powers, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF, would be joining —- eventually.

BYU, an independen­t in football with other sports in the West Coast Conference, is preparing to join the Big 12 in 2023. The three American schools are required to give the conference 27 months’ notice and pay $10 million exit fees. The Big 12 said it expected them to join by no later than summer of 2024. And it left the door open to add more schools down the road.

“We’re living in a very fast-changing athletic environmen­t, and we will be at 14 for a while, we will drop back to 12, and as there are targets of opportunit­y or as there are situations that dictate that we change compositio­n, we’ll be prepared to do those things,“Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby said in September.

Aresco conceded growing to 14 was a way for a conference that has become a feeder league for the Power Five to be prepared for future poaching.

“We decided that there was strength in numbers,” Aresco said. “We also looked around and said you know there are some schools that we might be interested in later on, why not, you know, think about taking them now?”

C-USA and the Sun Belt are next up in realignmen­t. With only eight remaining members, Conference USA needs to both protect its assets and add on. A request for comment from Conference USA Commission­er Judy MacLeod was not immediatel­y returned.

The Sun Belt continues to publicly say it will explore its options, but Commission­er Keith Gill told AP the conference is feeling no pressure to act now that the American has made its move.

“There is no timetable,” Gill said.

He declined to comment on reports the 10-football member Sun Belt is eyeing some of C-USA’s remaining schools such as Southern Mississipp­i, Marshall and Old Dominion along with FCS powerhouse James Madison.

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