Click here for linkDon't U.S. Senators have something better to to do like getting 20 million Americans back to work in this country besides pushing their weight around and getting involved in conference realignment?
Three senators have been hammering B12 for weeks
The appearance that Louisville and Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell made a late push into the Big 12 expansion process this week is not accurate. Sources told CBSSports.com that three senators identified Wednesday in national reports have been involved in the process for what was termed “weeks”.
McConnell and West Virginia senators Jay Rockefeller and Joe Manchin had all been in contact with at least Oklahoma president David Boren before Wednesday’s messy expansion revelations sources said. Manchin threatened a Senate investigation if it was proven McConnell was lobbying in Louisville’s favor against West Virginia.
CBSSports.com reported exclusively Wednesday that the Big 12 had a press release ready and at at least two high-ranking conference officials were scheduled to fly to Morgantown, W.V. for the announcement that West Virginia was being accepted into the league. That process hit a snag when Louisville’s prospects improved.
But it wasn’t a last-minute thing. Manchin and Rockefeller have been working for West Virginia while McConnell, a Louisville graduate, supports his university’s fortunes. The Big 12 is seen as brass ring for each to keep continued BCS status.
It is a logical assumption that all three politicos were seeking Boren’s influence in the matter. Before becoming OU’s president, Boren was Oklahoma governor and a former Oklahoma state senator from 1979-94. The New York Times reported that McConnell had also contacted Texas Tech chancellor Kent Hance, himself a former congressman, to push Louisville.
Boren – a political animal of the highest order – now is central to the expansion discussion. According to sources and at least one report, Oklahoma wants the 10-year grant of rights and Louisville for the Big 12. Texas wants a six-year grant of rights and West Virginia.