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-   -   MU ****The official NEW new conference realignment thread.**** (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=255691)

Bambi 03-15-2012 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by H5N1 (Post 8455595)

you got some tiny towns on yours

http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/...ngerous-cities

Saul Good 03-15-2012 09:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8455882)

I guess you don't have to worry about anything in the state of Kansas being on a list that only includes major league cities.

Bambi 03-15-2012 09:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saul Good (Post 8455946)
I guess you don't have to worry about anything in the state of Kansas being on a list that only includes major league cities.

Wichita is bigger than Birmingham?


:shrug:

eazyb81 03-15-2012 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8456059)
Wichita is bigger than Birmingham?


:shrug:

:LOL:

The Birmingham MSA is twice the size of Wichita.

DaKCMan AP 03-28-2012 05:09 AM

A&M football tickets sell out for first time since 1990s.

Quote:

A&M sells out of football season tickets

By MATTHEW WATKINS
matthew.watkins@theeagle.com

Texas A&M fans proved Monday that they will fit right in with the football-crazy Southeastern Conference.

The Aggie football team has sold out of season tickets for the 2012 season, according to the 12th Man Foundation's website. The sellout likely means the Aggies will fill Kyle Field with season ticket holders for the first time since the stadium was expanded in the late 1990s.

Monday's sale, which closed in less than an hour, was for people who didn't previously have season tickets. Those who had tickets last year will still have the option to renew their seats. If they don't, more seats could become available for sale to 12th Man Foundation members in July, the nonprofit organization that handles Aggie tickets said on its website.

In the meantime, fans seeking new tickets must join a waiting list or pay a premium in the secondary ticket market. Prices on Stubhub, A&M's official secondary market, ranged from $875 to $8,749 on Monday.

Specific details on how many tickets were sold weren't available Monday. 12th Man Foundation President Miles Marks said in an email that officials are still finalizing details and will release them soon.

A&M officials largely attributed the increased demand for tickets to the Aggies joining the SEC. Aggie fans have expressed increased interest in home games against teams like Florida, Arkansas and LSU. The team will also allot about 6,000 seats for visiting teams compared to 3,850 when A&M was in the Big 12.

Last year, the 12th Man Foundation's ticket offices became flooded with requests as the Aggies publicly flirted with joining the conference. That, coupled with high preseason expectations, caused the Aggies to break its all-time attendance record in 2011.

Prior to that, the Aggies struggled to consistently fill the stadium. The school averaged about 15,000 to 18,000 in unsold season tickets each year before 2011. The remaining tickets were made available for single-game sales, often at a discount. Nonconference games frequently featured empty seats in the top corners of the 83,002-capacity stadium.

Now, the university is considering expanding.

Jason Cook, vice president for marketing and communications for the university and a member of a committee reviewing Kyle Field expansion, said A&M will present options to fans and the Bryan-College Station community in "late summer or early fall." Construction won't begin until at least 2013.

"Since the discussions began with the SEC, the fan interest has increased substantially to where we are not only looking at renovation but also how we can expand the stadium to accommodate the increased interest from our fans and the increase in SEC fans that will be coming to Kyle Field each fall," Cook said.

http://www.theeagle.com/am/A-amp-amp...03-26T23-46-47

Saul Good 03-28-2012 07:06 AM

So far, realignment seems to have greatly benefitted everyone in the original Big XII except Texas and possibly Oklahoma.

kepp 03-28-2012 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saul Good (Post 8498313)
So far, realignment seems to have greatly benefitted everyone in the original Big XII except Texas and possibly Oklahoma.

Yet people still bitch at us about it.

Bambi 03-28-2012 08:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saul Good (Post 8498313)
So far, realignment seems to have greatly benefitted everyone in the original Big XII except Texas and possibly Oklahoma.

Texas and Oklahoma don't sell out their season tickets?

weird

Saul Good 03-28-2012 08:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8498415)
Texas and Oklahoma don't sell out their season tickets?

weird

You think "didn't benefit" = "are worse off in every possible way"?

Weird

They haven't lost season ticket holders, statehood, or their car keys. They did lose their disproportionate share of revenue, though.

Bambi 03-28-2012 08:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Saul Good (Post 8498420)
You think "didn't benefit" = "are worse off in every possible way"?

Weird

They haven't lost season ticket holders, statehood, or their car keys. They did lose their disproportionate share of revenue, though.

huh? The Big 12 has added two better, more historic, and stronger universities.

The new media deal proves that.

It is what it is.

Bambi 03-28-2012 08:23 AM

Good riddance.

Although Texas A&M is a secular institution, its student body has a reputation for being religious and conservative. According to a 2005 student survey published in the Princeton Review, Texas A&M ranked 13th highest in the category "students pray on a regular basis".[42] Four years later, the Princeton Review ranked Texas A&M the eighth most socially conservative campus in the nation.[43] The Princeton Review also ranked the university in 2011 as the "17th least friendly" college in the United States for LGBT people.[44]

Saul Good 03-28-2012 08:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8498424)
huh? The Big 12 has added two better, more historic, and stronger universities.

The new media deal proves that.

It is what it is.

4 teams were lost, cupcake. I'm sure TCU is more historic than Nebraska, though.

DaKCMan AP 03-28-2012 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8498424)
huh? The Big 12 has added two better, more historic, and stronger universities.

The new media deal proves that.

It is what it is.

ROFL

Frazod 03-28-2012 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8498424)
huh? The Big 12 has added two better, more historic, and stronger universities.

The new media deal proves that.

It is what it is.

So are you pussies afraid to play them too?

Saul Good 03-28-2012 08:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wickedson (Post 8498428)
Good riddance.

Although Texas A&M is a secular institution, its student body has a reputation for being religious and conservative. According to a 2005 student survey published in the Princeton Review, Texas A&M ranked 13th highest in the category "students pray on a regular basis".[42] Four years later, the Princeton Review ranked Texas A&M the eighth most socially conservative campus in the nation.[43] The Princeton Review also ranked the university in 2011 as the "17th least friendly" college in the United States for LGBT people.[44]

In the spirit of becoming a conference that is both secular and progressive culturally, we'd like to welcome Texas Christian and West Virginia to the conference.


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