Winds of change: college basketball
enters a new world following massive realignment
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[October 29, 2024]
By JOHN MARSHALL
College basketball has undergone a massive upheaval in a short time.
The transfer portal has created what amounts to free agency, with
players switching teams like wardrobe changes at a Broadway show and
forcing coaches to rebuild their rosters annually.
Name, image and likeness compensation deals have changed the game
off the court, providing financial opportunities for athletes that
weren't there just a few years ago while adding another layer of
recruiting and retention headaches to coaching staffs. Extra
eligibility for players because of the pandemic impacted rosters,
too.
The latest jolt: Conference realignment, which has shifted —
consolidated? — power in college hoops.
Well, maybe outside of two-time reigning champion UConn.
“I don’t know what business anybody has been in where there hasn’t
been significant changes over time if you’ve been in the business
for three or four decades,” said Bill Self, coach at top-ranked
Kansas. “We’re going through one of those changes now and people
probably aren’t as comfortable with the change — as I’m not, either
— but I do think we’ll get through it and it’ll balance out, and
we’ll be at a place that we’re much more comfortable in a short
amount of time.”
The latest realignment round, namely a contraction and eventual
re-expansion of the Pac-12, started as a slow burn. Texas and
Oklahoma kicked things off by leaving the Big 12 for the
Southeastern Conference, then longtime Pac-12 rivals USC and UCLA
bolted to the Big Ten.
Colorado ignited a flurry of further Pac-12 defections by opting to
leave for the Big 12, a move that persuaded Arizona, Arizona State
and Utah to join the Buffaloes. Oregon and Washington left for the
Big Ten. California and Stanford followed suit, heading off to the
Atlantic Coast Conference.
That left Washington State and Oregon State as the only remainders
of the “Conference of Champions.” All of these changes took effect
this summer, setting up a season of change in college sports.
The Pac-12 has since announced a rebuild, mostly by raiding the
Mountain West Conference, causing a ripple effect. Even longtime
holdout Gonzaga plans to leave the West Coast Conference for the new
Pac-12 in 2026.
The jumbling has forged four massive conferences with nearly
coast-to-coast footprints, adding depth and talent to already-strong
conferences. The changes also have forced coaches to adjust, while
fans might need scorecards to remember who's playing where.
[to top of second column] |
UConn head coach Dan Hurley celebrates with forward Alex Karaban
(11) after their win against Purdue in the NCAA college Final Four
championship basketball game, Monday, April 8, 2024, in Glendale,
Ariz. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)
“Sometimes new is exciting,” Michigan State coach
Tom Izzo said. “Sometimes we want to be stuck in our ways, but we’re
not going to be able to be stuck in our ways, so I’m going to
embrace that part.”
Tony Bennett took the opposite route. The longtime Virginia coach
followed the footsteps of Villanova's Jay Wright two years ago by
walking away from the sport at a relatively young age of 55. Bennett
won a national championship in 2019, but grew weary of the 24-hour
merry-go-round that college coaching has become and retired less
than a month before Virginia's opener next week.
“The game and college athletics is not in a healthy spot and there
needs to be change,” Bennett said, calling himself a square peg in a
round hole. “I think I was equipped to do the job here the old way.
That’s who I am and that’s how it was. My staff has buoyed me along
to get to this point, but there needs to be change.”
UConn's Dan Hurley has flourished in the changing winds.
Hurley won his first championship in 2022, retooled his roster and
did it again. After flirting with the Los Angeles Lakers' job, he
had to rebuild the roster again — forward Alex Karaban is the only
returning starter — but has what he calls his deepest roster as the
Huskies try to become the first team to win three consecutive
national titles since John Wooden-led UCLA won its seventh straight
in 1973.
“I owe it to the people that invest in me and invest in these
players to literally drive the people around to you places that they
don’t think they can get to in such a pathological, sick, obsessive
way that you’re just pursuing championships so hard,” Hurley said.
Every team in the country is pursuing that coveted national title.
It's just many will be doing it from new conferences in this era of
turmoil.
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