I always love it when someone calls nationally-followed and adhered to methods by some of the best and brightest "dumb" without expounding on what is "smart".
In 10 years you'll see what the difference between long-term and short-term is.
Ha, I bet I will. Real easy to predict the future today, eh? I've got history on my side, at the very least.
A third grader understands all that.
All correct...
Also, today, we have this from aTm, to likely be officially announced Wednesday to the tune of almost a half billion. http://www.kbtx.com/home/headlines/...esday-205338281.html?mobile=yes&device=iphone
We are going to live to regret the day we opened the door to them...at least in terms of wins and losses on a football field...
The SEC dominates every single state in it's footprint to a greater and greater extent every single year with Kentucky being the only questionable outlier(UK has taken 4 of the last 6 against Louisville).
You trying to say that won't happen in Texas actually goes against history -- not for it.
Nevermind that aTm is 15-15 against them over the past 30 years.
In 2010, history said Texas was the dominant program in Texas. There has been a fundamental change since then.
In the case of alumni, no they don't. And I guess you missed the memo with Texas A&M having 37k turn in enrollment applications this year for 8k spots -- up from 27k last year -- since, you know, Manziel and football doesn't effect such things...Texas fans and alumni outnumber Texas A&M. That ain't changing just because of one freshman Heisman winner.
Sure. While they (re)build the most expensive renovation in college football history -- the SEC streak continues -- etc. Yeah, I'm sure the traction is on it's way out just like it was down in Baton Rouge after that Saban "flash in the pan". If you don't see the similarities between the two circumstances, I can't help you.Look, Texas A&M hired a good coach in Sumlin. They are excited about the newness of joining the best conference in football. Give it a few years to die down.
South Carolina has won the last 4 by an average of 17.5 points/game. Yeah, I'd say they own that state until further notice.South Carolina is not more dominate than Clemson, playa.
News flash, genius. So is South Carolina and Kentucky.Your analogy works for Florida and Georgia, because surprise surprise they are the flagship schools there.
Like what? Why doesn't Georgia Tech, Georgia State, USF, UCF, etc dominate then?U of G and U of F dominate for other reasons besides conference affiliation.
Coherence? Yes, they are flagship institutions that own their state. Was Louisiana originally different? No. What changed? Tulane left the SEC. That's what changed.I guess you want to try and say Arkansas, Louisiana or similar. Ha ha ha.
In the case of alumni, no they don't.
Sure. While they (re)build the most expensive renovation in college football history
I don't care what Texas' next move is.
The landscape in Texas has permanently changed.
aTm has 3 of the top 10 in Texas already committed. Texas has no one over #14.
What do they offer that aTm doesn't?
One game against Oklahoma is it. Meanwhile, aTm can sell LSU, the SEC, the last 7 national titles, triple the NFL draft picks, etc.
Yes, the landscape has changed -- and it will be permanent...
I'm just calling a spade a spade -- exactly like Patdog did already.That's a flaw in your thinking, but you know this already. You're trying too hard to argue with me.
Pot meet Kettle.And....you can tell the future how? Sounds like you're the one rolling with the emotions. Caught up in the hype.
Using Scout as your reference point just quantifies the fact that you don't need to be discussing recruiting. Guess you missed where aTm finished last year at #8 in the 24/7 Composite -- while Texas finished at #17.Are you now telling me Texas can't recruit? Per Scout, aTm is #1. Guess who's #2? That's right, the Longhorns. Such a huge difference. Get the **** out of here with this weak stuff. Texas gets basically whoever they want.
And again -- you fail to read and comprehend. The question was "what does Texas offer that aTm doesn't". aTm offers EVERY SINGLE one of these things -- with the city being the ONLY even somewhat arguable exception.One of the best cities in the country? One of the best football programs in the country? One of the most storied traditions in the country? Some of the most resources in the country? Some of the most powerful people in the country?
LulzThis is about where you should think about shutting up and letting this thread roll on off the front page.
aTm has already done that on every single level of their existence.You have to actually get to Texas' level before you can pass them.
My common sense simply allows me to adequately see the monster that is aTm coming down the tracks. Since yours doesn't, I really don't know what to tell you...Yep, because you can see the future, just as I can.
Still doesn't make it a good decision. Obviously those schools would have voted no in order to keep their little brother down, when has that EVER been a good decision in the history of sports?? Never, is your answer.
Is there a way a team can be voted out of the sec?I would vote to send Ole Miss to another conference in a heartbeat. I'm sure the feeling is mutual.
I'm a pretty big NFL fan and the Rams moving back to LA is a hot topic right now. I try to keep up with it just because I find that kind of dumb **** interesting and every single article (LA Times, Sports Illustrated, etc) has talked about how apathetic Missouri fans are outside of the Cardinals and how Kansas City and St. Louis are not actually as good of TV markets as they look on paper.I disagree with that too. Put simply for you, Clemson would have been better than Missouri in my opinion. 20 years from now, more people will watch Texas A&M vs. Clemson than they would Texas A&M vs. Missouri. In pretty much any sport. Probably even in the state of Missouri, St. Louis and Kansas City.