Texas Big Ten expansion rumors swirl around internet
Reports have emerged about Big Ten officials meeting with Texas in order to include them in conference
Jon Graef
The sports world is atwitter (in both the denotative and new media senses of the word) about the latest rumors surrounding the Texas Longhorns and the Big Ten. According to the Lawrence Journal-World, Texas and the Big Ten conference have been engaging in “preliminary exchanges.” Meaning what, exactly? No one quite knows, exactly, but everyone is sure of two things: 1. There have been exchanges and 2. Said exchanges were preliminary.
What’s the significance of Texas and the Big Ten having an exchange, preliminary or otherwise? Here it is: Any expansion of the Big Ten would be the first of its kind since the Big Ten went to 11 teams in 1991. So the eleventh team in the Big Ten is now old enough to purchase cigarettes and porn, to put it another way. Also worth noting: If Texas goes to the Big Ten, then cable revenue is bound to grow by leaps and bounds. As Tom Keegan of the Journal-World puts it: “Getting TV sets in the massive state of Texas tuned to the Big Ten Network would qualify as a home run for the Big Ten.”
Reports have emerged about Big Ten officials meeting with Texas in order to include them in conference
Jon Graef
The sports world is atwitter (in both the denotative and new media senses of the word) about the latest rumors surrounding the Texas Longhorns and the Big Ten. According to the Lawrence Journal-World, Texas and the Big Ten conference have been engaging in “preliminary exchanges.” Meaning what, exactly? No one quite knows, exactly, but everyone is sure of two things: 1. There have been exchanges and 2. Said exchanges were preliminary.
What’s the significance of Texas and the Big Ten having an exchange, preliminary or otherwise? Here it is: Any expansion of the Big Ten would be the first of its kind since the Big Ten went to 11 teams in 1991. So the eleventh team in the Big Ten is now old enough to purchase cigarettes and porn, to put it another way. Also worth noting: If Texas goes to the Big Ten, then cable revenue is bound to grow by leaps and bounds. As Tom Keegan of the Journal-World puts it: “Getting TV sets in the massive state of Texas tuned to the Big Ten Network would qualify as a home run for the Big Ten.”

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