
Ben Maller, citing an unnamed source, is reporting that the University of Pittsburgh is joining the Big Ten conference, that it’s a done deal and that some announcement will be coming down the pike on Thursday. Whether or not the report is actually true, it’s worth looking at how Pitt would fit into the Big Ten, and what that school’s departure would mean for the Big East, which would be left with only six teams. Well, seven…if you count Louisville.
Pittsburgh is a near-ideal fit for the Big Ten, geographically speaking. The University of Pittsburgh campus is almost exactly between Ohio State and Penn State, giving Penn State a natural rival and Minnesota another boring (but not terribly long) plane ride, a situation that should be alleviated once the conference breaks into divisions. It’s the ideal spot for a 12th school not named Notre Dame.
Academically, Pitt will hold its own. Pittsburgh received a score of 52.0 in the latest US News and World Report university rankings, which put it 56th among all national universities so ranked. The average Big Ten score was 57.1, and the average rank was 50th. Their strong academic reputation will ease the school’s entry into the conference, which must be ratified by the faculty of the current member institutions.
Pitt is pretty good at football. Pitt finished 15th in the AP rankings after a 10-win season; the Panthers also finished 2nd in the Big East, trailing only undefeated Cincinnati in their conference. The rest of the Panthers’ sports programs are not quite as strong; Pitt finished 93rd in last year’s Directors’ Cup, which is based on schools’ performance in all varsity sports. The average Big Ten school finished 29th in that same span.
The Big East is all but finished as a BCS conference. Pitt’s departure would leave the Big East with seven teams, two of which were acquired from Conference USA less than five years ago. And the options to bolster the conference’s membership are rather slim. Geographically, the best prospective members would be Temple (MAC), Marshall (C-USA), Buffalo (MAC), and Navy (FBS Independent). Yeah, I’m not impressed, either.
ASYLUM POLL: Which team would YOU like to see in the Big Te11n?
But the biggest question might deal with the Big Ten’s name. The conference kept the “Big Ten” moniker even after adding Penn State as its 11th school in 1990, though they’ve now committed to always spelling out the “Ten.” Honestly, I don’t really care. If they can squeeze a two into that logo of theirs, that works for me. And put a pirate ship on their, too. Pirates are pretty sweet.


Wasn’t one of their major goals to expand the market size of the conference (preferrably into NY)? When you have the chance to add a Pittsburgh to your league (already had that market anyway), YOU HAVE TO DO IT!!!
I think their goal was just to shut Joe Paterno the hell up. When he kept complaining about getting “another team in the East,” I don’t think he meant Syracuse. But I’m sure time was also a constraint; if this is a go as we’re led to believe, they want this fucker up for the 2010 season.
To say the rest of their programs are not as strong as the football program is selling Pitt short, since in the only other program that really matters, Men’s BB, they were one of the top teams of the last decade.
No Backyard Brawls anymore? Or at least not two a year anymore.
As a Louisville native/diehard and Syracuse alum I can say with utmost certainty that both of these programs will share the national championship next year in almost all NCAA sports. Pitt is making a massive mistake leaving for the golf clap Big 10. Aside from tosu they may have the most apathetic fans in the nation. Why be classy when you can be awesome?
JJ, you’re right, but I was speaking comprehensively.
@ Punter – Not sure why they have to shut Paterno up now, nature will handle that itself within a couple years.
I won’t believe this until I see it. I thought this was going to take a year minimum?
No new TV markets, won’t help recruiting, plays in a pro stadium and if the B10 splits into two conferences you’ll probably have Pitt, PSU, OSU, Michigan, MSU & Indiana/Purdue against Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, NW & Indiana/Purdue.
I’d be ok with Pitt. Good school overall, but I’m just bitching because I still want Missouri.