Yes. SEC will say “either you (ku) comes w/out ksu or we go get UL”. Because UL would be an entirely better option than KSU. Entirely. I’m not even convinced that the sec will go to 16 with the options available. Who cares if the pac goes to 16 or the ACC goes to 16? Like the SEC is going to be like “wow, we can’t compete, we’re no longer the best football conference w/out KU and KSU”. GMAFB. And I don’t care about the scheduling issues that a 14 team league will have, but it is not a deal breaker, it’s not mission impossible. When the SEC offers a life raft for just one person, you don’t choose to drown.
Yeah, I'm starting to think in this round we're probably not going to see all the conferences go full on 16 like the PAC will.
Larry Scott appears to really have a hard on for being the first super conference, and it might make some degree of sense that the others will use it as litmus test for the next couple of seasons while they incrementally add their pieces, if there aren't particularly good options on the table to choose from, i.e. K-State, KU, Louisiville, etc. The big problem is the 7 team division scheduling but there are ways to get around it
The ACC, SEC, could go to 14, theoretically. Big 10 could stay pat at 12 for a while as they work the Notre Dame angle.
I also agree that UofL is a much better fit with the SEC than K-State. Their facilities absolutely blow ours out of the water. The downtown arena is the best collegiate venue in America, bar none. They're South of the Mason Dixon and culturally they fit the bill. They have multiple national championships to their credit in basketball, and UoL / Kentucky is already one of the greatest rivalries in the game. Their football for the most part sucks outside of the Petrino years but they do have a new and bigger stadium at 60K. They also have big time political power in Kentucky that will lobby the sh*t out of it, if the SEC does become a possibility. If you're looking at Apples to Apples comparison, they across the board would be a better fit. They're basically University of Kentucky on an urban campus. There also is the precedent to take a city school - look at Vanderbilt in Nashville.