Word out of Sunday's SEC-meeting to discuss Texas A&M and the larger issues regarding possible expansion has the members' presidents and chancellors "being content with the current 12-team alignment and not voting to extend and invitation at this time" to ANY schools to join.
There is accompanying vague encouragement regarding A&M in particular in the statement released, and the exact wording more than merely leaves the door open for welcoming such a move in the future--in fact, the statement does nothing to dampen the general direction things have been moving in, only the SPEED at which they're moving. The spokesman pointedly notes that the process must and has been happening at a much slower pace than the reporters and the media have been reporting it. We'll see.
The major sticking point, by their own account, has been the necessity for adding a 14th team as well. There are a number of complex internal considerations and opinions on that decision. The "A&M-question" in fact appears commonly accepted, it seems--by all appearances, they're going to be welcomed at some point, but the combination of the question of the 14th member and the SEC NOT wanting to be seen as directly participating in the break-up of the Big 12 has precipitated this response. A&M's moving to the SEC will almost certainly happen at some point, and perhaps very soon--just not "this week".
There is accompanying vague encouragement regarding A&M in particular in the statement released, and the exact wording more than merely leaves the door open for welcoming such a move in the future--in fact, the statement does nothing to dampen the general direction things have been moving in, only the SPEED at which they're moving. The spokesman pointedly notes that the process must and has been happening at a much slower pace than the reporters and the media have been reporting it. We'll see.
The major sticking point, by their own account, has been the necessity for adding a 14th team as well. There are a number of complex internal considerations and opinions on that decision. The "A&M-question" in fact appears commonly accepted, it seems--by all appearances, they're going to be welcomed at some point, but the combination of the question of the 14th member and the SEC NOT wanting to be seen as directly participating in the break-up of the Big 12 has precipitated this response. A&M's moving to the SEC will almost certainly happen at some point, and perhaps very soon--just not "this week".