I know there are some fans who want Kent State to drop down to FCS, or drop football altogether. If Kent chose the former, then it would most likely play football in the Missouri Valley Football Conference with North Dakota State. South Dakota State, Youngstown State, Northern Iowa, Illinois State, Western Illinois, South Dakota, Southern Illinois, Missouri State. and Indiana State. If Kent chose the latter, it would lose its ability to stay in the Mid American Conference because the MAC requires member universities to sponsor football, men's basketball, women's basketball, and women's volleyball.
As a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference, Kent would replace rival Akron with Youngstown State, which may not be bad, but it would have to travel to North Dakota and South Dakota. Replacing Akron, Bowling Green, Toledo, Ohio, Miami, and Buffalo with far away schools such as North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Northern Iowa, South Dakota, and Missouri State just doesn't appeal to me.
Furthermore, I have always believed that academics play a part in conferences. When you look at the MAC, you see that all the schools are academically similar. The same can be said about the Big Ten and the Atlantic Coast Conference.
College presidents typically want to align themselves with colleges that share similar academic goals. If you don't agree with this statement, read what another poster said about this subject below.
"To answer those who joke about conferences having nothing to do with academics, on the surface, sure, it seems crazy, but Presidents are the decision makers. Presidents want to align with other Presidents with similar goals. Athletics is nothing but a marketing division of a major university, so think of athletic conferences as university marketing partnerships. Some Presidents would prefer not to align their marketing efforts with schools that don't align with their academic profile/mission.
L'ville, I believe, was a decision made in fear of the ACC falling apart. ACC Presidents were willing to "sacrifice" the overall profile of the league in an effort to keep the existing partnerships intact.
All that said, if a university's athletic department was put in a position of being irrelevant, the President would have to decide what to do, and would likely seek a path of relevance since athletics is the face of the university. That is why people say most presidents in the ACC want it to remain intact, but if it begins to fall apart, it would ultimately be every man for themselves.
Going full circle in this thread back to the AAU question. It's simple, AAU schools like to be affiliated with one another (including through marketing/sports), and schools aspiring to be AAU would be doing themselves a favor by aligning themselves as closely as possible with other AAU schools. Sports may not be the only way, but it's a really good one since athletic conference presidents are very active with one another."
Although the MAC has only one AAU member (Buffalo), I believe it's fair to say that academics is an important factor in determining conference membership.
Sure, Kent State could be more competitive in the FCS, but the prestige that comes with the MAC out weighs any competitive advantage of playing in the Missouri Valley Football Conference.
http://www.ubbulls.com/general/2016-17/releases/20170403cae0jo