2010–12 Southeastern Conference realignment


The 2010–12 Southeastern Conference realignment refers to the Southeastern Conference dealing with several proposed and actual conference expansion and reduction plans among various NCAA conferences and institutions. Moves that involved the SEC were a relatively small part of a much larger NCAA conference realignment that began in the 2010-11 academic year and continued through the first half of 2014. The SEC was one of the least impacted conferences, as no member schools announced plans to join other conferences, while two schools from the Big 12 Conference joined the conference as all-sports members. Several other schools have been rumored as potential expansion candidates.
Although realignment within the NCAA continued into 2013 and 2014, there were no moves or credible rumors involving either current or potential future SEC membership beyond those which took place during 2011-2012.

Background

The SEC last had a membership change in 1992, when Arkansas left the Southwest Conference and South Carolina left the independent ranks to join the conference. This allowed the SEC, which after the additions had 12 members, to split into divisions and hold its first conference championship game in Division I-A football. The SEC had also considered adding Texas, Texas A&M, Florida State, and Miami.
Neither the 1996 nor the 2005 conference realignments affected the SEC, as the conference neither gained nor lost members during either event, although once again Texas and Texas A&M were considered as members in 1996 after the dissolution of the Southwest Conference, before both joining the newly formed Big 12 Conference.
The next wave of realignment began in 2010, after both the Big Ten Conference and Pacific-10 Conference announced plans to expand to 12 members. These moves triggered a cascade of conference moves nationally.
Unlike other conferences such as the Big East and the ACC, the SEC allows members to voluntarily leave the conference at will, with no exit fees. In addition, whereas a major point of contention within the Big 12 was the unequal distribution of revenue among member schools, the SEC distributes television revenues generally equally among member schools.

2010-2011

Though the SEC was not looking to expand, it was rumored that several schools were interested
in joining the conference.
The most notable rumor involved Big 12 member Texas A&M. A&M was part of a rumored move of six Big 12 schools to the then Pac-10: in addition to Colorado, the other schools rumored involved long-time rival Texas, Texas Tech, Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State. However, A&M was reportedly also considering a move to the SEC ; it was rumored that Gene Stallings, the former A&M and Alabama football coach who was at that time a member of the A&M System Board of Regents, was leading the SEC move.
ESPN reported on June 11 that Texas, Texas Tech, and the two Oklahoma schools were prepared to accept an invitation from the Pac-10. The report also indicated that Texas A&M was torn between the Pac-10 and SEC, and was given a 72-hour deadline to decide on its future destination. Ultimately, the Texas and Oklahoma schools elected to remain in the Big 12, with A&M guaranteed a $20 million annual payment from Big 12 television revenues.
Meanwhile, on the eastern side, rumored candidates included West Virginia from the Big East, and the ACC member institutions from Virginia and North Carolina excluding Wake Forest. Ultimately, neither West Virginia nor any ACC school joined the SEC. However, the threat of one or more of its members possibly joining the SEC in the future led the ACC to vote unanimously on September 13, 2011 to raise its exit fees to $20 million.

2011-2012

As with the prior wave of realignment, the SEC had no issues with members seeking to leave and no concrete plans to expand. But as with the prior wave, rumors of possible expansion surfaced, once again led by Big 12 member Texas A&M.
In July 2011, the Texas A&M University System Board of Regents met to discuss the long-term impact of the Longhorn Network, a new TV channel devoted to Texas Longhorns sports that was set to launch a month later. Shortly before the meeting, an official of ESPN, partners with Texas in the network, gave a radio interview in which he strongly hinted that the network would also televise high school games of potential Longhorns recruits.
According to Sports Illustrated writer Andy Staples, the Longhorn Network broadcasting high school games "was too much to bear." Though the Big 12 made new rules to stop the high school telecasts, on August 15, 2011 the A&M System Regents met in a special session to, among other matters, authorize "the president to take all actions relating to Texas A&M University's athletic conference alignment", the first official step in A&M's long-rumored move to the SEC.
A&M announced on August 31, 2011 that it would leave the Big 12 in June 2012 to join the SEC, but the invitation process was prolonged by various moves by the Big 12, which feared that A&M's departure would scuttle the conference. Most notably, Baylor president Ken Starr threatened legal action if the SEC invited A&M. In early September, the SEC issued a formal invitation to Texas A&M, but it was dependent on the Big 12 and its members releasing the conference from any liability with regard to the move. The SEC invitation was not final until September 25.
Although at the time of the SEC's announcement of A&M's admission it was not actively pursuing additional members, schools such as the aforementioned ACC schools and West Virginia from the 2010-2011 rumors once again came up as potential members. However, West Virginia ultimately joined the Big 12 on October 28, 2011.
But the Big 12 Conference's press release also hinted at another departure - Missouri was not listed among the "expected" ten members for the 2012–13 school year. The hint turned out to be correct: nine days later, on November 6, 2011, the SEC officially announced that it had added Missouri as its 14th member.
Though once again no ACC-member school opted to leave for the SEC, the ACC announced an even more massive increase in exit fees. The fee jumped from a fixed $20 million to an amount equal to three times the conference's annual operating budget.
The SEC expansion also indirectly led the Big 12 to revise its network deal with ESPN to extend it to 2025 and, more significantly for the stability of the conference, the conference also extended the league's grant of rights from six to 13 years. This means that if a school leaves the Big 12 during the term of the newly extended contract, the league will keep all of that school's broadcast revenues for the duration.

Membership changes

Gallery of SEC membership changes