They will essentially have 9 away games now. But at least their AD will be making a ton of money selling out the rose bowl.Equally shocking to at least the Bruins will be walking into stadiums full of 80, 90, 100,000 college football fans.
Huh, should be the opposite.I’ve lost the ability to talk out of my ass since that damned colonoscopy!
Dude. My entire point was that the economic side is pre-baked into any school that Yormark would start talking to so I don't feel a need to do half-baked, inexpert speculation.You are right about the networks driving this. They care about the bottom line.
At this point though we need to care about the bottom line as well. That is what motivated us to jump to the B12 when we were in a position of strength and got a full share instead of waiting for the rest of the conference.
If CU wants to compete at the highest level, if we want playing for championships to be a realistic possibility we have to worry about the money.
The SEC and the B1G are headed towards $100 million per school payouts, if you are trying to compete with the schools getting that kind of money then what a school does to the conference media distribution matters. If adding school X is likely to increase our value to the Networks by $5 million per school then come on in, I don't care if all they teach is truck driving and hair styling.
On the other side of that if adding Y school is likely to end up reducing our share by $3-4 million per year then no thanks, and I don't care how good their academics are or how great a place they are for a road trip.
CU really needs to become an elite football program over the next 5 years akin to what they were in the 90’s. We need to at the very least be perennial Top 25. If Prime can turn this ship around CU needs to follow up his tenure with a premier HC and staff.My point is that I believe the upper tier of CFB will become a closed shop at one point. If you aren't in by that point, you're out. Permanently.
Have said before that I see a complete re-organization of college football coming.CU really needs to become an elite football program over the next 5 years akin to what they were in the 90’s. We need to at the very least be perennial Top 25. If Prime can turn this ship around CU needs to follow up his tenure with a premier HC and staff.
I also wonder how the SEC, Big 10 and Big 12 will deal with their perennialy weak programs? Will college football become an exercise in survival of the fittest?
I could imagine an entire demise of the current conference system into something more like a league similar to the pro leagues.
FIFM you a$$holesHas anyone else noticed that the thread that has everyone talking out of their a$$es is currently 665 pages? It is by far the longest thread in AllBuffs (on the front page of the Football Chat). Apparently more people talk out of their collective a$$es than we hate Nebraska.
Can you imagine what this thread would have looked like over at netbuffs?
The number is probably closer to zero. Notre Dame might be the only school that could do it since their fan base extends well beyond alumni. Alabama has 200,000 living alumni - even if you assume 100% of those alumni live in separate households and would pay for service and you assume the number of bandwagon, non alumni fans is 4-5x the alumni number, you still don’t get close to 1.7M.Woof. You could probably count the number of teams in all of the NCAA that would have at least 1.7M paid monthly subscribers on two hands. There's not a single one in the old Pac12.
Does joining the WCC for non football and going indy work for WSU/OSU? I get those schools are all religious, but that's a geographic no-brainer. Stanford and Cal might do it.Good. I feel really bad for what’s happening to OSU and WSU but they bring zero value to a conference. Why would anyone in the Big12 want to split the pie with OSU? What good is moving to the Big12 if the entire conference (minus the 2 best brands) comes with? Enough.
Does joining the WCC for non football and going indy work for WSU/OSU? I get those schools are all religious, but that's a geographic no-brainer. Stanford and Cal might do it.
FIFY!I think if you asked, the majority of college football fans would really prefer a system closer to what we had 30 years ago. A handful of smaller, regional conferences where travel is easy and rivalries are developed over decades of familiarity. All that’s essentially gone now, and I don’t for a second believe the leadership at the SEC or B1G is terribly happy about it. They’re doing what they have to do in order to remain WEALTHY.
Yes. And then World Cup ski racing, a real sport, which presently has the greatest ski racer in the history of the sport, who is an attractive, very well spoken, super likable icon at age 27…. and American… Isn’t shown on any US sports channels… at all….Money available.
At a bar Friday, I saw professional table tennis, followed by professional wiffle ball, both on ESPN. That was followed by people trying to climb icy steps. Tom Brady is part owner of a televised pro cornhole team. There are a number of pro athletes who are getting more per year, than universities are getting from their conference payouts.
I'm having trouble with it all. One player getting more for his season, than a university gets, for all sports, for 1 year.
Wide World of Sports was one of the best shows ever. I may not watch 2-3 hours of a lot of sports on the regular, but when you package them as alternating feature events, they get much more interesting to me.Yes. And then World Cup ski racing, a real sport, which presently has the greatest ski racer in the history of the sport, who is an attractive, very well spoken, super likable icon at age 27…. and American… Isn’t shown on any US sports channels… at all….
I grew up watching Phil and Steve Maher, Bode Miller, etc. on NBC — on weekends of all times.
Wide World of Sports was one of the best shows ever. I may not watch 2-3 hours of a lot of sports on the regular, but when you package them as alternating feature events, they get much more interesting to me.
Love "The Agony of Defeat"
Lol, they won't admit they were wrong, even to themselves.Yeah....I'm wondering if that meeting starts out by admitting that they really screwed the pooch by letting UCLA leave before there was a confirmed home / TV deal for Cal. That B1G money isn't going to look all that great when its getting split by two schools.
Love "The Agony of Defeat"
Option 1: Leave the ACC and Fight the Grant of Media Rights
Option 2: Wait for Public Schools to Wreck the ACC, and Then Leave
Option 3: Collect Votes to Dissolve the ACC
Buckle up guys for more conference turbulence.