翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ 2011 AFC Champions League group stage
・ 2011 AFC Champions League knockout stage
・ 2011 AFC Champions League qualifying play-off
・ 2011 AFC Cup
・ 2011 AFC Cup Final
・ 2011 AFC Cup group stage
・ 2010–12 Continental Beach Volleyball Cup – South America
・ 2010–12 European Nations Cup First Division
・ 2010–12 European Nations Cup Second Division
・ 2010–12 European Nations Cup Third Division
・ 2010–12 Myanmar border clashes
・ 2010–12 Southeastern Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Atlantic 10 Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Big 12 Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Big East Conference realignment
2010–13 Big Ten Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Colonial Athletic Association realignment
・ 2010–13 Conference USA realignment
・ 2010–13 Mountain West Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Singapore floods
・ 2010–13 Southern United States and Mexico drought
・ 2010–13 Sun Belt Conference realignment
・ 2010–13 Western Athletic Conference realignment
・ 2010–14 NCAA conference realignment
・ 2010–14 Portuguese financial crisis
・ 2010–2011 Queensland Flood and Cyclone Citation
・ 2011
・ 2011 (album)
・ 2011 1. deild karla
・ 2011 1000 Guineas


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

2010–13 Big Ten Conference realignment : ウィキペディア英語版
2010–13 Big Ten Conference realignment

The 2010–13 Big Ten Conference realignment refers to the Big Ten Conference dealing with several proposed and actual conference expansion and reduction plans among various NCAA conferences and institutions from 2010 to 2013. U.S. sports media credited expansion plans by the Big Ten as being the trigger for a massive wave of conference realignment during this period. While no Big Ten members announced plans to join other conferences, the league announced expansion from 11 members to an ultimate total of 14 full members and one single-sport associate member, with one full member joining in 2011 and the remaining schools joining in July 2014.
==Background==
The Big Ten, founded in 1896 as the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives (which remained the conference's legal name until 1987), had been for decades one of the more stable major college conferences. Before the 2010–13 realignment, the conference had seen only three changes in membership since World War I. In 1946, the University of Chicago, one of the league's charter members, chose to de-emphasize varsity athletics and left the conference, although it continues its academic affiliation with the Big Ten to this day as a member of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation. In 1949, Michigan State University joined the conference, bringing its membership back to 10. The next change came in 1990, when Pennsylvania State University (Penn State) joined.
The first hints of the coming realignment came in December 2009, when Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany announced that the league would consider adding one or more teams. Media reports then indicated that the Big Ten had two major motives for expansion. First, adding one or more schools would increase the reach of the conference's cable network, the Big Ten Network. The conference reportedly received as much as 88 cents per month for every subscriber to the network in the Big Ten member states, and in the 2008–09 fiscal year, the Big Ten Network alone distributed $6.4 million to each of the conference's 11 schools. Second, expanding to 12 or more schools would allow the conference to launch a potentially lucrative conference championship game in football.
In April 2012, after moves by the Big Ten triggered massive realignment, then-''CBSSports.com'' sportswriter Brett McMurphy commented,
It was Jim Delany's cow in a Chicago barn that kicked over the lantern that started the country's conference realignment inferno. After that it was a hundred reactionary moves from other conference commissioners, shoring up their ranks, while scorching college football's landscape.〔


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「2010–13 Big Ten Conference realignment」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.