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Im a typical North Newark type growing up in the 60s/70s I usually headed for Seaside Heights !!Wildwood says hello!
Im a typical North Newark type growing up in the 60s/70s I usually headed for Seaside Heights !!Wildwood says hello!
Speaking of Maryland.....Would like to pass along that I found a very interesting article in today's Washington Post sports section on the dire economic situation that they face at this time. They will make money at some point but most likely not until 2021 at the earliest. Some low points include......
1. 21 million dollar deficit and borrowing another 20million for this year.
2. 85 million owed in construction debt.
3. 15 million dollar membership payment to Maryland being withheld by A.C.C. until the lawsuit comes to a conclusion.( How much will that be)
Some interesting notes on travel burden... and the cost to pay/care for each athlete that the big demands each member school must adhere to, and so on.
THIS IS A MUST READ. In the end Maryland will make money but at what cost? Remember the days when the game on the field was most important?...... and now its the $$game being played behind closed doors that trumps all. College Football is the most exciting, colorful, action packed sport that exists... in my opinion. What a sad state of affairs.
I enjoyed the Hamptons and Montauk Pt in the summers of my youth!I haven't been there in 13 years !Fair point. Of course, I'm not from there thank goodness. Spend all my time in the city or on the island.
Yeah,you know your in North Jersey when you hear were going "down" the shore!Everything is pretty regional i guess.Just about anybody who's not from New Jersey will call it the Jersey Shore. People from the Philly area who's visits tend to be day trips or weeks in the summer tend to call it the Jersey Shore. If they own a house or rent for the summer they tend to call it just the shore. It's like the cheesesteak. If you're not from Philly, its the "Philly cheesesteak." If you're from Greater Philadelphia, it's just a cheesesteak.
Everything else is part their over ambitious plan to fund expensive infra improvements without the fanbase to back it up ...hopefully being in the Big Ten will solve those issues sooner or later.
But didn't they claim it had to do with under payment by the ACC?Being in the Big Ten won't solve it. Maryland Athletics has been a financial mess for 3 decades.
It has to do with lack of alumni and fan support for the size athletics program Maryland is trying to run. They need a smaller athletic department for the budget that they can afford. The problem for Maryland is that now they are going into a conference that has several programs that will operate on more than twice the budget that Maryland can afford. It will be difficult for Maryland to compete, and if the quality of the product they put on the field or on the court suffers, then the fans disappear.But didn't they claim it had to do with under payment by the ACC?
Being in the Big Ten won't solve it. Maryland Athletics has been a financial mess for 3 decades.
Their own commission thinks that they will continue to be:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...7c5ecc-0419-11e3-88d6-d5795fab4637_story.html
That article I linked is talking about how Maryland athletics will remain a basketcase financially for another decade even in the Big Ten. This one talks about how they have were a financial basket case from 1986-1996:At no point does this article indicate that Maryland has been a financial mess for 3 decades. Where are you pulling that from? Maryland suffered from a crafty A.D. (now at NC State) who was telling everyone that she was balancing the budget by borrowing from a rainy day fund and doing other silly stuff like paying for suites no one was interested in. Yes, Maryland's fanbase is fickle. Yes, Maryland alum don't support their university like Ohio State and Michigan fans do. I'm just not seeing anything that supports your 30 year claim.
That article I linked is talking about how Maryland athletics will remain a basketcase financially for another decade even in the Big Ten. This one talks about how they have were a financial basket case from 1986-1996:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sports/longterm/memories/bias/launch/bias19.htm
I've been around the ACC for a long time. I can assure you they had financial problems in between. 1986 til today adds up to 3 decades. I can remember them selling their home football games against Florida State in the 90s to Jacksonville because they couldn't get anyone to go to the games in College Park, and they could make some extra money off FSU fans in Jacksonville for the Maryland home game. The ACC made them stop. You can't run a league like that.
But, the Big Ten sees them as a collection of cable boxes that the Big Ten can use to extort some more subscriber fees from Comcast. So they got an invite. The ACC gets a much healthier athletic department in Louisville as a replacement. Someday hopefully we might get UConn too.
Was going to write almost the exact thing!I agree that the ACC is a better fit for UConn athletically. UConn would be much more competitive in football in the ACC then the B1G. We have many more natural rivals in the ACC. We have plenty of CT transplants throughout the entire footprint that would attend games (any time we play bball in Florida it's UConn south). All in one time zone which is good too for TV. But, I've given up on the ACC -- they have passed on us too many times and have no reason to add at this time, not till ND becomes a full member which won't happen, not at least for another 15 years.
The B1G, however, offers a bigger pay day and should be a much more stable conference. There is likely a better chance for us to go B1G at this point if they find the right partner that can get out of their conference (Mizzou is the only option available in my opinion).
My preference is selfishly ACC because I plan to move south in a year or two and would have easier access to get to games. At the end of the day, I would obviously take either conference if they offered and be very happy.
But, the Big Ten sees them as a collection of cable boxes that the Big Ten can use to extort some more subscriber fees from Comcast. So they got an invite. The ACC gets a much healthier athletic department in Louisville as a replacement. Someday hopefully we might get UConn too.
Considering how FSU is the only AD in the ACC to at least break even without taking tons of subsidies I'm not sure how you can build a case against just Maryland when it comes to ineptitude. Maryland was the worst of the lot to be sure, but I wouldn't call most of ACC's ADs healthy.
Either way, as you stated, both conferences seem to like the adds for different reasons so I guess this is a case of positive synergies on both sides.
Well, yes and no.
The Big Ten did buy into two historical basket cases, but being the Big Ten, they're playing the long game.
They got two very large markets and I'm sure the thinking is that the Big Ten will sell itself to all of those television sets and hope that Maryland and Rutgers stop shooting themselves in the every time they get the chance.
In Louisville, the ACC gets a good athletic department and a marginal market. They're the short game and the ACC will miss the mid-Atlantic if the time ever comes for them to try to sell their own cable network. The deal looks good on the playing field in 2013, but handing the Big Ten all of those television sets in exchange for about half the eyeballs in the city of Louisville is a net loser on the balance sheets.
As for UConn, we'd just like to see you all burn.
I would love to see ACC add Temple - the level of ridicule on the message boards would be epic.
We're now talking about a team that never even won the MAC in the decade it was relegated down a level from the Big East.
The ACC can restore the Mid-Atlantic by adding Temple if the ACC thinks it needs the Mid-Atlantic. While Temple doesn't captivate its home market, neither does Maryland. It would be a judgement call based on whether Temple can help get distribution on Comcast. I don't know what the plan is, but I know that the ACC has one.
I personally like UConn for the New York/New England area, and UConn is a better athletic department than Temple. But the question is the Mid-Atlantic. I think Temple can restore much of what Maryland lost. We'd trade Baltimore for Philadelphia. I'd only want to do this if we're going to 20 members ultimately.
Kinda like the Big Ten adding Rutgers.
Temple was only in the MAC for football. How did they do in the Atlantic 10? I could see Philly forgetting who Villanova is if Temple started playing an ACC basketball schedule and winning. Yes they have work to do in football, but don't expect Maryland or Rutgers to win the Big Ten East football title for a while either.
I strongly encourage the ACC to follow that line of reasoning and see what happens. Maybe add Memphis too while at it.
I know what would happen. Philadelphia would become an ACC basketball town. There would need to be work on the football side, but the Big Ten is going to find hard work in Maryland and Rutgers too in football. They are going to find hard work in everything when it comes to Rutgers.
We've been talking markets here. Someone just pointed that out above regarding Louisville. In Louisville, the ACC added the Sugar Bowl and NCAA Men's Basketball Champion. When we discuss that, people tell me it's a small market. Philly is a bigger market than Louisville is it not?

The main difference would be that Kentucky in general has no pro teams while Philly does - it thoroughly a Pro town, but yes Philly is a bigger market if that's the only metric you're looking at. Penn State obviously rules the college sports side of things but their Basketball program has sucked for a long time so there is technically room for a basketball program to make its mark.
If ACC really wants to go for it, I think they would![]()
I knew this day would come. Just came much quicker than I ever imagined. How about ECU? They going to the SEC? Taking in ODU?It would be primarily a basketball move done to get the ACC Network on the air in that market. That's all. I'm not advocating that Temple football will light the world on fire in Philadelphia. I looked at their attendance last season for football. It averaged around 25,000. That looks sparse in a 69,000 seat stadium. There is room for improvement there. Maybe they will improve in the AAC.
You seem like a good dude, but you're putting whatever credibility you have in jeopardy by comparing Temple to Maryland.The ACC can restore the Mid-Atlantic by adding Temple if the ACC thinks it needs the Mid-Atlantic. While Temple doesn't captivate its home market, neither does Maryland. It would be a judgement call based on whether Temple can help get distribution on Comcast. I don't know what the plan is, but I know that the ACC has one.
I personally like UConn for the New York/New England area, and UConn is a better athletic department than Temple. But the question is the Mid-Atlantic. I think Temple can restore much of what Maryland lost. We'd trade Baltimore for Philadelphia. I'd only want to do this if we're going to 20 members ultimately.
You seem like a good dude, but you're putting whatever credibility you have in jeopardy by comparing Temple to Maryland.
You're outta your freakin' mind if you think Temple replaces even 1/10th of what the ACC lost when Maryland bolted. There's a reason the Big East waited until its boat sank and its lifeboat was sinking before giving Temple the invite.