Drew
Its a post, about nothing!
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2013
- Messages
- 7,778
- Reaction Score
- 27,548
I went over to Land Thieves to peruse the thread referenced by the OP. To my amazement there's Okie Lite continuing his crusade to run down UCONN at every opportunity. I scanned CSNBBS the other day and sure enough there's old Road Hunter crapping all over the Huskies in every thread. I simply can't fathom why a fan of a program that has zero interaction with Connecticut would have such a negative fixation with it. Then it came to me. Which one of you degenerates banged his wife?
It's more commonly known as a tube sock.
So Colin Cowherd is going to be the new DJ at the Rent?
I went over to Land Thieves to peruse the thread referenced by the OP. To my amazement there's Okie Lite continuing his crusade to run down UCONN at every opportunity. I scanned CSNBBS the other day and sure enough there's old Road Hunter crapping all over the Huskies in every thread. I simply can't fathom why a fan of a program that has zero interaction with Connecticut would have such a negative fixation with it. Then it came to me. Which one of you degenerates ?
He's at the car wash.Has Scott Gray weighed in on all this yet?
Durks. Did you really dirty his favorite sock?
Both of em 'll betDurks. Did you really dirty his favorite sock?
WVU to the AAC...It makes sense that the total dismemberment of the B12 would be under discussion. One-off moves are disarranging the college map and are not creating the biggest dollar payout. Managing the disposition of 10 schools at once allows a more rational rearrangement, creating more dollars ... It would explain Boren's recent comments -- the natural impulse of a former politician to get out in front of a parade he sees developing, so that he can claim to be its leader.
I'm guessing:
Texas to the ACC with a ND type deal keeping LHN.
Kansas and UConn to B1G.
OU and one other to SEC
OSU and Baylor to ACC.
Two others to either ACC or Pac, so that there is a voting majority to dissolve B12.
The last two leftovers to either Pac or AAC.
In this scenario I think WVU as the eastern outlier gets into either SEC or ACC.
WVU to the AAC...
News Corp is still sitting on a mountain of cash. And certain conferences aren't beholden to ESPN to make their own networks be all that it can be.
How could ESPN lose the ACC? They have them under contract until the end of time.
Members leaving...it becomes worthless. That's why the GOR and increased payout etc. Keeping them happy enough.
I'll believe someone leaves a P5 for
another P5 when there is a GOR in place when I see it. No offense to our legal and self proclaimed legal experts...
How could ESPN lose the ACC? They have them under contract until the end of time.
No ACC Network is the make or break for ACC schools. And I am serious about that. The B1G is going to get paid a good $45 million to $50 million per school per year off of their new contract and their Tier1 rights, which is what is up for bid, could be shared among FOX and other networks unless FOX puts up a bid so large in dollars that they take the rights and leave ESPN behind.
FOX already owns their conference title game and that is up for bid. Therefore, FOX will bid heavily to retain the conference title game and get more B1G games. FOX also owns 49% of the B1G Network.
If FOX can pull away the B1G from ESPN, then FOX becomes the media company that owns the most CFB rights and not ESPN. ESPN doesn't own all of the SEC rights either. THey do own the rights to the ACC. So, to make the ACC Network, they will need to buy what they already own to broadcast what they already own.
The devil in the details is that the SEC Network is really just another ESPN channel. That is all it is.
So, when the B1G schools are clearing $50 million a year, which IS realistic since that is what Delany said the contract is likely to go for, the ACC schools will remain at their usual $22 millionish a year level. So the B1G schools end up double the revenue than the ACC schools.
No ACC Network means the ACC schools will run away fast to where they can get more money to fund their stadium upgrades for various sports, pay student athletes, etc, etc.
So it is up to ESPN to spend money on stuff they already own and broadcast to keep the rights they already own. Thus, they spend more on what they already own just to keep what they already own.
This is the sort of thing that people keep posting - but nobody has moved since the GORs have been signed.
So maybe it happens and maybe they don't stand up - but I'm not sure how people make such bold confident predictions when so much is unknown.
What are the chances the Big Ten walks away from ESPN? 5%? If that?
I mean it's been what 15 months at most since GOR's were signed? Movement takes time.
Money talks. If the B1G is really staring down a deal that will net members $50 million you can bet that nobody in that conference will shed a tear about never visiting Bristol again.
If you think the Big 10 coaches want to lose their ability to be on ABC and ESPN... I'm pretty sure they don't want a huge recruiting disadvantage like that.
Didn't the ACC sign their GOR around when Maryland left in 2012.
They reap what they have sown.No ACC Network is the make or break for ACC schools. And I am serious about that. The B1G is going to get paid a good $45 million to $50 million per school per year off of their new contract and their Tier1 rights, which is what is up for bid, could be shared among FOX and other networks unless FOX puts up a bid so large in dollars that they take the rights and leave ESPN behind.
FOX already owns their conference title game and that is up for bid. Therefore, FOX will bid heavily to retain the conference title game and get more B1G games. FOX also owns 49% of the B1G Network.
If FOX can pull away the B1G from ESPN, then FOX becomes the media company that owns the most CFB rights and not ESPN. ESPN doesn't own all of the SEC rights either. THey do own the rights to the ACC. So, to make the ACC Network, they will need to buy what they already own to broadcast what they already own.
The devil in the details is that the SEC Network is really just another ESPN channel. That is all it is.
So, when the B1G schools are clearing $50 million a year, which IS realistic since that is what Delany said the contract is likely to go for, the ACC schools will remain at their usual $22 millionish a year level. So the B1G schools end up double the revenue than the ACC schools.
No ACC Network means the ACC schools will run away fast to where they can get more money to fund their stadium upgrades for various sports, pay student athletes, etc, etc.
So it is up to ESPN to spend money on stuff they already own and broadcast to keep the rights they already own. Thus, they spend more on what they already own just to keep what they already own.