C
Chief00
Good post - thanks for your research - fair enough. The non Major sports lost $22 million of the $40 million, so there might be something there. Of course a significant portion of this is the Title IX required scholarship tail from football but travel and coaches salaries are factors on the margins. It’s unclear to me how the AD non coaching salaries/benefits get allocated?No blind faith, just some intel/knowledge on the travel expense discovery process (which is what this discussion started out as when you stated the travel savings weren't real).
You also continue to dismiss the impact of less/closer/cheaper travel by the other 17/18? teams besides MBB, WBB and Football that will play in the Big East Conference. UConn Athletics spent $7.3m on team travel in 2018. Football spent $1.2m of that number.
>>Still, any difference in travel expense for UConn figures to be relatively slight. In the 2018 fiscal year, UMass (playing a schedule similar to what the Huskies might build) spent $1,193,649 on football travel, according to the school’s NCAA financial statement, almost identical to the $1,151,379 that UConn spent as a member of the AAC. That comparison suggests travel expenses won’t rise much when the Huskies become independent and certainly shouldn’t offset the savings UConn expects from its other sports programs. <<
Are the projections likely to have some deviation as actual expenses come in... sure. Show me a multi-year analysis that doesnt have some assumptions built into it that may fluctuate. That's not "inherently sloppy" - that's life.
But what does a dumb old ambulance driver know...