During the
early-2010s conference realignment, Aresco was, according to Vannini, frustrated with the Big East's slow pace in TV negotiations. In 2012, Big East mainstays
Pitt and
Syracuse had announced their 2013 departure for the
Atlantic Coast Conference. Doug Woodward, then athletic director at the
University of South Florida, told Aresco that he was ideal for the Big East commissioner's opening, and he soon joined, making him possibly the first conference commissioner to come directly from TV sports. By the time Aresco joined, two other Big East schools (non-football member
Notre Dame and full member
Rutgers) were deep in negotiations with other conferences, with both eventually leaving the Big East/American, and shortly after Aresco took office, the so-called "Catholic 7" schools that did not sponsor FBS football left and bought the
Big East name. He managed to bring in several schools from
Conference USA and negotiate a TV deal with ESPN, keeping the renamed
American Athletic Conference alive. Aresco would see the conference through a
second round of realignment before retiring in 2024. ==References==