Gotta say this is surprising. Could the B1G be the first conference to voluntarily leave ESPN/ABC? Depending on the deal NBC could provide equal if not more exposure for the B1G
Gotta say this is surprising. Could the B1G be the first conference to voluntarily leave ESPN/ABC? Depending on the deal NBC could provide equal if not more exposure for the B1G
It could very well be possible. If the B1G and ESPN divorce, foxsports will have exclusive rights to air the games, that would put fox in a more lucrative and powerful position, and ESPN will be standing in quicksand .
The problem with Fox Sports having exclusive rights to anything is that people have shown a marked disinclination to watch their cable offerings.
The Big Ten isn't the NFL - they can't disrupt ESPN to any marked degree.
It seems that that's what happening.
The problem with Fox Sports having exclusive rights to anything is that people have shown a marked disinclination to watch their cable offerings.
The Big Ten isn't the NFL - they can't disrupt ESPN to any marked degree.
Maybe, but IMO they don't have to be the NFL. Nobody is the NFL now - pro or college - they're a juggernaut.
The B1G offers the best year round product in terms of member institution size, market, fan base - moreso than the SEC I would say because SEC hoops by and large is a tire fire once you get passed Kentucky and Florida most years.
FOX doesn't need to take 51% of ESPN's eyeballs to make a dent in the network - not right away at least. If they can move 15-25% in the first few years of having B1G sports, it could be enough to give other leagues and pro sports an incentive to give them a second look, which in the longterm could position FOX to overtake ESPN.
Nothing stays static in television.
For 16 years NBC's TODAY Show dominated morning TV until in 2012 ABC's Good Morning America broke it. Today the two networks are battling week in and week out for supremacy.
My point is saying that FS1 will fail because people won't watch it isn't a really good argument. FS1 is failing cause their current content is poor-to-mediocre at best, which in turn isn't enough to get people motivated to find it and change the channel. Put B1G football and hoops on there and the content part of the equation is getting closer to being solved.
It's not really the same thing. You can't copy having the properties at a whim but whatever.
What does that even mean? Who is saying that FOX Sports is going to replicate or steal ESPN's existing properties overnight and with ease?
It's a process. ESPN wasn't always ESPN. They benefitted greatly obviously by being first movers, but it wasn't until they started signing deals with various leagues and conferences that they grew over to the mammoth they are today.
Again, this argument that ESPN can't lose because it's ESPN isn't an argument at all. Things change and even the most seemingly invincible networks can fall.
I mean look at CNN right now. Who would ever have guessed the network that brought you the Gulf War live and invented cable news would drop out of first place? But as of this past March, FOX News jumped in front.
ESPN will have no choice but to promote the American if they lose the B1G. Can they sell it as a power league nationally if they dig in hard right away? I think you could argue that ESPN can make the public think whatever they want them to think.
ESPN will have no choice but to promote the American if they lose the B1G. Can they sell it as a power league nationally if they dig in hard right away? I think you could argue that ESPN can make the public think whatever they want them to think.
His point is that change is incremental. ESPN is still #1. But with more sports networks than ever, ESPN is losing the monopoly on broadcasting rights it once had.It's nothing like cable news or morning shows. That's was my point.
You can double down on silly analogies it doesn't make them any more accurate or relevant.
Of course ESPN can lose. You might want to consider it probably won't happen while they have MNF, MLB, and the NBA which are all way bigger properties than the Big Ten - which they haven't even lost yet.
It's nothing like cable news or morning shows. That's was my point.
You can double down on silly analogies it doesn't make them any more accurate or relevant.
Of course ESPN can lose. You might want to consider it probably won't happen while they have MNF, MLB, and the NBA which are all way bigger properties than the Big Ten - which they haven't even lost yet.
Comparing cable news networks to cable sports networks is a silly analogy? Man I'd hate to have your SAT score.
And again, back to my original point, getting the B1G isn't a silver bullet but it will succeed in peeling a certain percentage of viewers away from ESPN. That is a start, a chance to get into the ring and compete, which is what FOX desperately needs.
LOL - the fact you don't get that and combined it with trying to insult my intellegence is gold.
Great job spelling "Intelligence."
OMG someone mispelled a word while typing on their phone.
You've been wrong all day - I guess if the best you can do is a spelling mistake - enjoy it.
What a tool.
LOL - the fact you don't get that and combined it with trying to insult my intellegence is gold.
As for the rest - they are trying to compete in the worst way possible. They are trying to replicate a model that is past it's prime. They may as well start trying to build the best cordless phones or the best CD players.
ESPN has put themselves in a tough spot by wasting money on talentless hacks and overspending on properties. Fox is doubling down on the same talentless hacks and overspending on properties. If you break down what they spend per Big 10 game it's insane.
They are pretty much building a network of professional trolls. It's the most obvious losing strategy you'll ever see - but they went all in on it.
The problem with Fox Sports having exclusive rights to anything is that people have shown a marked disinclination to watch their cable offerings.
The Big Ten isn't the NFL - they can't disrupt ESPN to any marked degree.