The Aztecs and Zags in the Pac 12 together is something of a fever dream for me; SDSU is my alma mater and my family is from Spokane. At least one of my March brackets every year has them facing each other in the finals. Not that bad a bet recently.
But even in saying this new Pac 12 is built on the foundation of my own personal rooting interests, I can acknowledge it's not even a shadow of the former Conference of Champions. Nor was it aspiring to be. But there is a clear vision to be the Best of the Rest Conference and separate themselves from the Group of Five. - The Conference of Consolations if you will.
The Pac tried to bring together some of the most valuable schools in the MW (SDSU, Colorado State, Fresno State, Boise State) and AAC (Memphis, Tulane, USF, UTSA) to make a Frankenstein's monster conference that is wonky, non-regional, and basically ridiculous, but at least interesting. Throw in Gonzaga and it's certainly better and more exciting than the Mountain West simply adding WSU and OSU in a "reverse merger" for all that's worth.
So the Pac whiffs on the AAC teams with an inital low ball "take it or leave it" offer, settles for Utah State instead of UNLV, and gets a "thanks but no thanks" from UConn. Does not diminish that the Pac 12 is a single school away from being a legitimate conference again with some very real power in their ranks after being fully pronounced dead and buried a year ago.
Maybe they punt and add Texas State just to offically lock in the conference quota and get the ball rolling on the media rights negotiations. Or maybe they do go with ... wow, really, Sac State? Dream big Hornets - Stingers Up. (Honestly, if raidiing the Big Sky conference is the play here, I'd go for UC Davis and Cal Poly to be the token presitgious academic schools, and break up the run of 8 State schools and Gonzaga.)
But I wouldn't be surprised if they go back to the AAC teams, or at the very least Memphis, and sweeten the offer. Memphis AD outright said they rejected the offer because the money was too low, but if those numbers became more favorable, he's waiting by the phone. Pac reportedly offered each team $2.5 million to cover the exit fees. Maybe offering just Memphis $10 million gets the Tigers to reconsider.
In the end, it's been messy and gross, but it's good to have a loved one back from the dead.
Even if it's taken some weird science and grave robbing to make it happen.