Big 12 considering partnership with ACC, other leagues

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As much as we here at CFT would like the topic of expansion and conference realignment to be over and done with, we understand that’s an unrealistic request.

However, the Big 12 is considering an alternative to expansion that should still make for interesting offseason conversation. In an interview with the Austin-American Statesman, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby said his league is looking into an alliance with the ACC and two other unspecified conferences. The focus of the potential partnership — Bowlsby added that “nothing is imminent”  — would be on scheduling, marketing and perhaps television. It could also span a variety of sports, not just football and basketball.

“We’ve had conversations with three other leagues,” Bowlsby told the Statesman. “The ACC is one of them. It’s a process of discovery that would provide some of the benefits of larger membership without actually adding members.

“You can begin to get some advantages without taking on any of the disadvantages (of expansion). It’s one option that allows benefits. It’s kind of like friends with benefits.”

Before moving on, we’re going to let that last line sink in.

Anyway, Big 12 athletic directors are set to meet early next week in Grapevine, Tx., where the idea Will Likely be discussed. It’s an interesting proposal, although the reasoning is not necessarily unprecedented. The Big 12 and SEC came together over the past year to form the “Champions Bowl,” which later morphed into the Sugar Bowl. The Big Ten and Pac-12 also ventured into the idea of a scheduling agreement in late 2011, although that was put on hold about six months later.

But both agreements were about conferences taking further control of a quality product and maximizing its appeal, exposure and profitability. While the nitty gritty details of this proposed alliance aren’t known and probably won’t be known for a while — this is assuming the deal gets done — the goal is essentially the same.

Utah State player upgraded to fair condition after collapse

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Utah State redshirt freshman wide receiver Josh Davis is in fair condition on Friday, one day after collapsing at spring football practice following sudden cardiac arrest, the university announced.

Davis, initially was listed in critical condition, was breathing on his own. He is in the intensive-care unit at McKay-Dee Hospital in Ogden, Utah.

Davis’ parents arrived in Utah on Thursday evening.

The 6-foot-1, 185-pound Davis, who is from Carlsbad, California, collapsed at Merlin Olsen Field and was immediately treated by the training staff, the university said. He was taken to Logan Regional Hospital.

The university said Davis was stabilized in the Logan hospital before being moved to Ogden.

Alabama suspends freshman defensive back after drug arrest

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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Alabama freshman defensive back Tony Mitchell has been suspended from the team following his arrest on a drug charge.

Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban said Monday after the first practice of spring that Mitchell was suspended from the team “and all team activities until we gather more information about the situation and what his legal circumstance is.”

The Holmes County Sheriff’s Office arrested Mitchell and another man, Christophere Lewis, last week on a charge of possession of marijuana with the intent to sell or deliver, according to a post on the department’s Facebook page. Lewis also was charged with carrying a concealed gun without a permit.

“Everybody’s got an opportunity to make choices and decisions,” Saban said. “There’s no such thing as being in the wrong place at the wrong time. You’ve gotta be responsible for who you’re with, who you’re around and what you do, who you associate yourself with and the situations that you put yourself in. It is what it is, but there is cause and effect when you make choices and decisions that put you in bad situations.”

Mitchell, who is from Alabaster, Alabama, was a five-star prospect rated the 34th-best player and No. 3 safety in the 247Composite rankings.

Mitchell was driving the vehicle during a traffic stop. After deputies smelled marijuana, Mitchell picked up a baggie of marijuana from the passenger floorboard, according to the department’s Facebook post.

Sheriff’s deputies found “an additional significant amount of marijuana, a set of scales, a loaded handgun between the passenger seat and center console, and a large amount of cash,” according to the department’s Facebook post.