Andrew Murawa is the RTC correspondent for the Pac-12 and Mountain West conferences and a frequent contributor.
For more than a year now, college sports fans have looked on with some mixture of fascination, excitement, disgust and horror as conferences and their member institutions have played a game of chicken with all-out conference-realignment Armageddon. Last June, following Nebraska’s announcement that it was leaving for the Big Ten, the Big 12 was on the verge of extinction when a quartet of teams led by Texas strongly considered a move west to form the first superconference, the Pac-16. However, after a weekend on the edge of the wire, they backed away and recommitted to the Big 12. But now, with Texas A&M’s slow-motion defection from the Big 12 to the SEC all but finished, the Big 12 is in another fight for its survival, with athletic directors and conference commissioners around the country considering their options should the Big 12 dissolve.
The first big domino here is obviously Texas A&M. They formally announced last week that they intend to leave the Big 12 Conference by July 2012, and the school is expected to announce later today that the SEC is their landing spot. Reportedly the 12 existing SEC schools voted 10-2 Tuesday night in favor of inviting the Aggies to its league, but a formal announcement could potentially hit a snag if any of the other nine remaining Big 12 schools chooses to not waive its right to litigate against the SEC for tortious interference with its conference affiliation.
It’s now official. After over a month of hinting, positioning and closed-door legal wrangling, Texas A&M officials have received approval from the Big 12 Conference that its stated intention to “explore its options” with respect to conference realignment will not be met with resistance (of the litigious kind, at least). Earlier this week, commissioner Dan Beebe sent A&M a letter outlining the school’s options for withdrawal from the Big 12, and today the TAMU president, R. Bowen Loftin, wrote Beebe with the school’s next steps:
I have determined it is in the best interest of Texas A&M to make application to join another athletic conference. We appreciate the Big 12’s willingness to engage in a dialogue to end our relationship through a mutually agreeable settlement. We, too, desire that this process be as amicable and prompt as possible and result in a resolution of all outstanding issues, including mutual waivers by Texas A&M and the conference on behalf of all the remaining members.
The essential phrase in Loftin’s statement of intent to the Big 12 is ‘mutual waivers.’ This language implies that there is a tentative agreement in place between the other Big 12 institutions and the conference itself to waive any future legal redress so long as A&M pays its due and propers at the door on its way out. How much dough that will be is anyone’s guess, but by comparison, Nebraska’s skip to the Big Ten last year cost it a one-time fee of $9.25 million dollars, while Colorado’s venture west to the Pac-12 cost it $6.9 million dollars.