I can't disagree with what you are saying. Having said that, I watched the entire FSU BOT meeting. Every single trustee the AD and the president of FSU were in lock step. These are very intelligent people with a tremendous amount of responsibility. I can guarantee they thought about the benefits and ramifications of going public, before they did. Maybe FSU is willing to be the bad guy. If the ACC disolves, someone will have to be blamed for that.But would you agree that there are other ways to send a clear message that are far less antagonistic? For example, the FSU president could’ve just picked up the phone and had a one on one conversation with either Sankey or one of the SEC school presidents. I think a phone call would’ve been as effective at sending a message to the SEC as FSU’s public airing of their grievances during this week’s board meeting.
FSU is free to handle this however they want, but if they try to leave now things will be contentious with the ACC. Anytime you’re dealing with a contentious situation, it’s wise to do everything you can to avoid antagonizing the other parties involved.
If they are intending to leave, I just don’t think FSU is being very wise in how they are going about it. I guess that’s my main point.