The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Texas/OU move would shake college football

- By Ralph D. Russo

INDIANAPOL­IS >> Barry Alvarez lived through the tidal wave of conference realignmen­t that swept over college sports in the early 2010s as Wisconsin’s athletic director, watching the Big Ten grow to 14 teams from the Midwest to the East Coast.

Another round of shuffling could be on the horizon, with Texas and Oklahoma initiating discussion­s with the Southeaste­rn Conference about leaving the Big 12 and joining what is already college football’s strongest league.

Alvarez’s reaction when he heard the news: “Why?”

One day after word of the discussion­s surfaced, the ripple effects across the sport were clear as schools far from the Big 12 and SEC tried to sort out where this is going.

The Big 12 had a meeting planned for late Thursday with athletic directors and university presidents and chancellor­s to be briefed on what’s going on with Texas and Oklahoma, a person familiar with the meeting told The Associated Press.

It was not clear if Texas and Oklahoma officials would participat­e, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the Big 12 was not making its actions public.

Leaders from other conference­s leaders were hesitant to speculate on what’s next, but some observers were concerned about the potential consequenc­es.

“College football is filled with people operating in silos and what they fail to realize is that if they only look at and try to build their silo as big and as shiny as possible than the entirety of the sport is not going to be as strong as it needs to be,” said former Colorado quarterbac­k Joel Klatt, the lead college football analyst for

Fox, which hold television rights with the Big 12, Big Ten and Pac-12.

“I think a move like this would be to the detriment of the sport overall.”

Former Oklahoma quarterbac­k and Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield put it more starkly: “It would ruin the Big 12. It would be done,” Mayfield said during a break in shooting TV commercial­s in Cleveland.

The Big 12 was thought to be on life support about a decade ago after losing Nebraska, Colorado, Texas A&M and Missouri. Managing to hold on to Texas and Oklahoma allowed the Big 12 to survive as a Power Five conference after it added TCU and West Virginia.

Back when that was playing out, conference­s were reacting to one another. The Big Ten pushed over the first domino when it announced in 2009 it was going to explore expansion. Eventually, it lured Nebraska away from the Big 12.

“We often talk about how uncomforta­ble this time is,” new Nebraska AD Trev Alberts said. “It is. It’s a changing environmen­t. There’s a lot of stress. Now’s the time you want to be part of some stability.”

That Big Ten expansion sparked a frenzy, with conference­s and schools fending for themselves. Could a Texas/Oklahoma move to the SEC be the next fire starter?

Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren was asked about the talks and whether they could prompt the conference to look at expansion —- maybe even reaching out to the two Big 12 schools —as he opened football media days at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Warren stayed away from speculatin­g, calling the news just another example of the volatility sweeping through college sports at the moment.

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