ACC votes to add Stanford, Cal, SMU: Conference presidents approve expansion to 18 schools | Page 18 | The Boneyard

ACC votes to add Stanford, Cal, SMU: Conference presidents approve expansion to 18 schools

But how long are these contracts with the distributors? At the first expiration, the cable companies are going to say NO.
Don't know & by the time some of these are up for renewal ESPN's DTC service will be up & running. I would think that the Disney/Charter deal lays the groundwork for most future cable/sat deals
 
Don't know & by the time some of these are up for renewal ESPN's DTC service will be up & running. I would think that the Disney/Charter deal lays the groundwork for most future cable/sat deals
Either way ESPN's service won't differentiate by state so there's really no plus in getting more states like they just did. And I doubt anyone will have interest in keeping the $1 charge per customer after the current contracts run out
 
If the ACC is vetting Tulane, USF, Memphis, UAB, ECU and Tulsa "in order of interest", that tells me two things:

1. The ACC knows it is about to lose its biggest brands.
2. UConn is a lot farther down the list of potential replacements than I would ever have imagined.
You may be correct, but if the ACC is going to lose its biggest brands then why would you want to get into a conference with what remains? To be in a league with Stanford and Cal?
 
You may be correct, but if the ACC is going to lose its biggest brands then why would you want to get into a conference with what remains? To be in a league with Stanford and Cal?

Agree. The SEC and B1G will take whoever they want from the ACC.

It's possible the Big 12 can swoop in and take what they want afterwards too. Depends on how things fall.

If the Big 12 can pick off teams, UConn won't want any part of whatever is left of the ACC. If the ACC can fend off the Big 12, it might be a viable landing spot for UConn.

The only certain is that teams wanted by one or both of the SEC and B1G will be gone.
 
Agree. The SEC and B1G will take whoever they want from the ACC.

It's possible the Big 12 can swoop in and take what they want afterwards too. Depends on how things fall.

If the Big 12 can pick off teams, UConn won't want any part of whatever is left of the ACC. If the ACC can fend off the Big 12, it might be a viable landing spot for UConn.

The only certain is that teams wanted by one or both of the SEC and B1G will be gone.
Problem I see is that everyone will be taken and UConn will be left standing without a chair. Just like now.
 
If the ACC is vetting Tulane, USF, Memphis, UAB, ECU and Tulsa "in order of interest", that tells me two things:

1. The ACC knows it is about to lose its biggest brands.
2. UConn is a lot farther down the list of potential replacements than I would ever have imagined.

I don't think the ACC would need to do any vetting for UConn. If anything, I'm surprised Nova isn't on that list.
 
If the ACC is vetting Tulane, USF, Memphis, UAB, ECU and Tulsa "in order of interest", that tells me two things:

1. The ACC knows it is about to lose its biggest brands.
2. UConn is a lot farther down the list of potential replacements than I would ever have imagined.
If the ACC is vetting those schools (they already know plenty about us), then they are planning on a doomsday scenario. The bottom half of the league must be jumping for joy reading this.
 
If the ACC is vetting Tulane, USF, Memphis, UAB, ECU and Tulsa "in order of interest", that tells me two things:

1. The ACC knows it is about to lose its biggest brands.
2. UConn is a lot farther down the list of potential replacements than I would ever have imagined.
A lot farther down, as in not even being listed on the page. They. Don't. Want. Us. I used to think we'd be a natural fit for the ACC, but their constant middle finger to us makes me want them all to fail. I say that knowing that having their payout or fraction thereof would immensely help UConn athletics. Shoot at this rate CCSU has a better chance of going FBS and getting into the MAC than UConn getting invited to the A¢¢.
 
A lot farther down, as in not even being listed on the page. They. Don't. Want. Us. I used to think we'd be a natural fit for the ACC, but their constant middle finger to us makes me want them all to fail. I say that knowing that having their payout or fraction thereof would immensely help UConn athletics. Shoot at this rate CCSU has a better chance of going FBS and getting into the MAC than UConn getting invited to A Athletic Conference.
I'm pretty sure we are monitoring the situation, though.
 
I'm pretty sure we are monitoring the situation, though.
Fat lotta good that'll do. That's like me monitoring the Mega Millions drawing: it's ALWAYS gonna be someone else (rather, some other school) getting rich.
 
I'm pretty sure we are monitoring the situation, though.
Justin Timberlake Shrug GIF
 
-> The ACC “didn't get as much of a basketball lift from this wave of expansion as its rivals did,” according to ESPN’s John Gasaway, who observes that over the past five seasons, Stanford, Cal and SMU“recorded an average adjusted efficiency margin of +5.58. That's a good deal weaker than what we see from soon-to-be newcomers to the Big Ten(+14.71), the Big 12 (+14.90) and the SEC(+17.58).” Gasaway also points out the trio “collectively has not won an NCAA Tournamentgame since 2014” while “Cal and SMU rank near the bottom of the nation's (current or soon-to-be) major conference programs in terms of performance over the past five seasons. For that matter, current ACC members like Boston College, Wake Forest, Pitt and Georgia Tech are in much the same statistical boat. Which means in a year's time the ACC will have six members that, for now, rank among the bottom 12 nationally for performance over the past five seasons.” (link) <-

 
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-> The ACC “didn't get as much of a basketball lift from this wave of expansion as its rivals did,” according to ESPN’s John Gasaway, who observes that over the past five seasons, Stanford, Cal and SMU“recorded an average adjusted efficiency margin of +5.58. That's a good deal weaker than what we see from soon-to-be newcomers to the Big Ten(+14.71), the Big 12 (+14.90) and the SEC(+17.58).” Gasaway also points out the trio “collectively has not won an NCAA Tournamentgame since 2014” while “Cal and SMU rank near the bottom of the nation's (current or soon-to-be) major conference programs in terms of performance over the past five seasons. For that matter, current ACC members like Boston College, Wake Forest, Pitt and Georgia Tech are in much the same statistical boat. Which means in a year's time the ACC will have six members that, for now, rank among the bottom 12 nationally for performance over the past five seasons.” (link) <-

On to Tulane, ECU and Memphis!
 
"Which means in a year's time the ACC will have six members that, for now, rank among the bottom 12 nationally for performance over the past five seasons.”

Gee, for a conference that seems to have some academically rigorous institutions, they sure made a bunch of dumb@$$3d decisions.
 
No matter which way the rules of CR blow, the ACC gets it wrong every single time. At least this round it managed to grab a flagship state u . . . check that. Cal isn't a flagship. Seriously, Cal might be a worse addition than rutgers. It's as if the ACC watches what the SEC and B1G do, and then pulls a Costanza, does the opposite, and grabs mediocrity by the horns.
 

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