Undoubtedly, we are seeing the last twilight fall on the Big XII.
Colorado is moving to the Pac-10. Some sports scribes are claiming the Pac-10 is on the verge of extending offers also to UT, TAMU, OU, and OSU. Nebraska has chosen to become a second-class school in the Big Ten++. All together, that leaves only BU, ku, KSU, ISU, MU, and TT as the remnants of the Big 12.
Without consideration to the remaining schools, the athletic department should become proactive in establishing an equitable alternative to the status quo and avoid the automatic jumping to a new conference.
Quite simply, today's internet technology makes it possible to say to hell with the lucrative fistful of TV dollars that the ABC's and the ESPN's have waved under the noses of athletic administrators and conference executives alike.
The biggest problem with the Big XII from the very beginning was in revenue sharing from TV receipts.
Today, I watch more on demand "television" over the Internet than I do on the ole, outdated TV. I have HD any place in the world on a laptop computer.
The school owns the rights to university athletics telecasts, thanks to the universities of Georgia and Oklahoma and the College Football Association.
Kansas State University should exert those rights and boldly go where no university has gone before: Live telecasts of football games over the Internet on a subscription basis with advertisement sponsorship, just like TV. The technology is there. It is proven. And there are a zillion companies out there for sponsorship through commercial advertisement from car manufacturers to brew masters.