Report: Missouri and Texas A&M to vote against Texas, Oklahoma joining the SEC

Reading between the lines, Texas and OU joining the SEC is all but complete. Only one thing is holding the move back from being official.

Reading between the lines, Texas and Oklahoma joining the SEC is all but complete. Both schools seem to be finished with the Big 12, searching for a bigger and better future.

While that might sound very Aggie of me, at the end of the day, it’s true. There is no doubt the Southeastern Conference will be better for both the Longhorns and Sooners in the long term.

Only one thing is holding the move back from being official.

A vote must be conducted by the SEC before either school can be allowed in the conference. To go through with the transaction, at least 75% of the SEC’s affiliates must approve.

In other words, 11 of the 14 current members must vote yay. To turn down the proposition, four members must vote nay.

Kirk Bohls of the Austin American Statesman is reporting at least two schools from the SEC would vote no: Missouri and Texas A&M. Only two others would be needed to block the conference’s expansion.

Texas A&M is the obvious one. Aggie athletic director Ross Bjork stated he wanted “to be the only SEC school from the state of Texas” during SEC media days. Head coach Jimbo Fisher would not give a similar statement but was fast to claim he bet both schools wanted to become SEC members.

As for Missouri, many can understand why there is a motivation to vote Texas/Oklahoma out of their new home. Getting away from UT very well could have been the reason the Tigers jumped to the SEC in favor of the Big 12.

Some of the favorites to vote against the move also come from states where only one SEC school resides. Georgia, Florida, South Carolina and possibly Arkansas could be more no’s.

When a vote will take place has yet to be reported. However, Missouri and Texas A&M seem to have a difficult task ahead.

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Report: 11 of 14 schools would have to vote yes for SEC expansion

The Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners need 11 of 14 votes to receive an SEC Confernce invite.

[mm-video type=video id=01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc playlist_id=01eqbz5s7cf4w69e0n player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc/01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc-27c0d8c4e9e35cd6c4e79a82ae92b1d1.jpg]

On Wednesday afternoon, reports surfaced of a possible SEC expansion to 16 teams with the Oklahoma Sooners and Texas Longhorns interested in joining the conference. Continue reading “Report: 11 of 14 schools would have to vote yes for SEC expansion”

Report: 11 of 14 schools would have to vote yes for SEC expansion

The Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners need 11 of 14 votes to receive an SEC Confernce invite.

[mm-video type=video id=01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc playlist_id=01eqbz5s7cf4w69e0n player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc/01fb8jxq5dz9rhg1wemc-27c0d8c4e9e35cd6c4e79a82ae92b1d1.jpg]

On Wednesday afternoon, reports surfaced of a possible SEC expansion to 16 teams with the Oklahoma Sooners and Texas Longhorns interested in joining the conference. Continue reading “Report: 11 of 14 schools would have to vote yes for SEC expansion”

Texas and Oklahoma reportedly interested in joining the SEC

Texas and Oklahoma have reportedly shown interest in joining the SEC.

If you’re against forming a super conference, today is not your day.

According to a recent report from Brent Zwerneman of the Houston Chronicle (link requires subscription), Texas and Oklahoma are interested in leaving the Big 12 and joining the Southeastern Conference. If it came to fruition, it would shake up the college football landscape and become the first 16-team super conference.

Although there are pros and cons to every decision of this nature, the upside that may initially come to mind for Longhorns fans would be to renew the Texas-Texas A&M rivalry, while still keeping the Red River Rivalry intact.

It’s unclear how serious the report is, but it feels likely that it would be a decision that solely lands on the SEC’s shoulders. The Big 12 could pull out the red carpet in an attempt to keep their two top teams, but it may not be enough.

An announcement could come within a couple of weeks concerning the potential addition of UT and OU to the league, the person said, which would give the SEC 16 schools and make it the first of a national super-conference.

The report states that SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey declined to comment on the possible expansion.