i agree that missouri was the first to say they’s be willing to move; mizzou has a long list of complaints with the Texas dominated big 12...they want nothing more than to be in the big 10 and out from under texas’ thumb. having said that, them expressing interest in the b10 after the commish of the big 10 said back in dec that they were going to expand didnt get us to where we are today. texas being jealous of NU getting a better deal than they have is what will break up the conf eventually. if missouri had been invited instead of NU, the B12 would/could have replaced MU without losing any sleep. texas and nebraska have been in a pissing contest since day one about who has the biggest wee wee. tom osborne has made no bones about his dislike for texas and vice versa.
You got to love the way Missouri parlayed their invite to the Big 10 into an invite to the Mountain West.
Tom is that you?
Re: Nebraska. The Nebraska press conference explained the reasons the Cornhuskers have had a problem. "We're doing what's best for NEBRASKA! The heck with previous rivalries! The heck with the league! The heck with the other schools who will end up taking a financial hit on this! We're out for NEBRASKA!" Then, their big complaint with the Big 12 was that votes didn't go their way. When Oklahoma was asked what they wanted to do, they said they wanted to stay with Texas. Dittos for Oklahoma State, Tech, and Baylor (Baylor probably doesn't have an option.) A&M is only dithering over the SEC cause they don't want to break up the Texas rivalry. Course, part of that may also be that the SEC is really only interested in a package deal for both schools.
That's the reason, though, that Nebraska didn't have that much clout in the Big 12. They were only out for Nebraska. UT may be heavy handed (I went there, I know first hand) but UT could get an invitation to any conference in the country, and they're trying to work a package deal to get other schools into a conference with them. Maybe that's why the other schools were more willing to work with the Horns than the Huskers.
The Pac 10 issued the invitation to Colorado to stave off the possibility of Baylor coming into the league. They wouldn't have done that if Texas hadn't been pushing for a package deal for all the south schools. For Tech, Oklahoma State and Baylor, they didn't have that much of an option, as Texas is their ticket to the big league. Oklahoma has choices, though, and they went with Texas over trying to work with the Huskers.