Texarkana Gazette

Shockers approved to join AAC

- By Paul Suellentro­p

Wichita State will join the American Athletic Conference and leave the Missouri Valley Conference, its home since 1945.

“I think it’ll be very exciting for the fans. I think it’ll be really gut-wrenching for the coaches,” WSU basketball coach Gregg Marshall said. “... The entertainm­ent value should be through the roof.”

American commission­er

Mike Aresco and WSU president John Bardo confirmed acceptance of the invitation, given after the 12 AAC presidents voted unanimousl­y Friday morning to invite WSU into the conference.

“It’s just a matter of time before this becomes one of the best basketball conference­s in the country,” Aresco told reporters on a midday conference call.

Bill Potter, senior director of communicat­ions for the

AAC, said Commission­er Mike Aresco is expected to visit Wichita soon.

Bardo took a phone call from the AAC Friday morning.

“It was very important to move quickly become part of one of the best conference­s in America,” Bardo said during an afternoon news conference.

Bardo said that reviving a Shocker football program that had been dead for 31 years was off the table.

“We are not going to talk about football for a while,” he said. “Doesn’t mean it’s dead.”

Wichita State athletic director Darron Boatright said financial details are in the hands of attorneys and will not be final until next week at the earliest.

WSU will pay an entrance fee to the AAC. It will forfeit its shares of NCAA Tournament revenue earned as a Missouri Valley Conference school as a penalty for withdrawal without 24-month notice, as required by the MVC constituti­on. There is no exit fee from the MVC.

Several sources indicate the bill may come to around $2.5 million for WSU and will largely be addressed through private fund-raising.

The move will take place for the 2017-18 school year and include all Shocker sports.

According to the AAC, schools will play an 18-game men’s basketball schedule with seven home-and-home series and four one-time opponents.

“The addition of Wichita State bolsters an incredibly strong American Athletic Conference,” Temple men’s basketball coach Fran Dunphy said in a news release. “I applaud the conference presidents for their forward thinking for the league.”

Wichita State’s first AAC competitio­n will likely be a volleyball match in late September. The Shockers will likely compete for their first AAC title in the cross country championsh­ip meet in late October or early November.

“This is the kind of thing that galvanizes the conference and galvanizes our brand,” Aresco said.

The University of Wichita joined the MVC in 1945 and its identity as a basketball school grew with its membership in the “Valley of Death” during the conference’s glory days of the 1950s and 1960s. For most of the past 72 years, the Valley provided a competitiv­e and geographic­ally suitable place for Shocker athletics.

Presidents from the remaining nine Missouri Valley schools are scheduled to meet with conference administra­tors Sunday in St. Louis.

The AAC’s geography is more expansive. AAC members are Houston, Memphis, Tulsa, Tulane, SMU, Temple, South Florida, Cincinnati, Connecticu­t, East Carolina, Central Florida and football-only Navy.

Moving to the AAC is a reunion of sorts for Shocker fans. Houston, Memphis,

Tulsa and Cincinnati were all Missouri Valley members before leaving 40-or-more years ago.

Among the highlights of Wichita State’s MVC tenure are the 1965 Final Four, the 1989 College World Series title and the 2013 Final Four. In May, the Shockers won the MVC All-Sports Trophy for the fourth straight year and 10th in the past 13.

As Wichita State’s athletic program, led by men’s basketball, grew in stature over the past decade, discontent with the MVC grew among fans.

In 2015, Bardo announced that the school would look at conference affiliatio­n as part of a comprehens­ive examinatio­n of WSU’s future in athletics, one that will include considerin­g new sports, new facilities and a new set of conference partners.

Bardo had three conference­s in mind—the American, the Mountain West and the Atlantic 10—as possible upgrades. The public evaluation accomplish­ed its goal of putting WSU on the market. Two years later, the American welcomed the Shockers.

Speculatio­n about WSU’s interest in the American started in December 2015, when the university announced its plans to evaluate its conference options and the addition of sports. Bardo’s desire to associate Wichita State with schools he views as similar institutio­ns—such as AAC-members Memphis, Houston and Cincinnati—drives his interest to help the school’s enrollment, academic and athletic goals.

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