CL82
NCAA Woman's Basketball National Champions
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
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True, but we were talking national championships not NCAA championships.Anything pre August of 1973 doesn’t count as an NCAA Championship
True, but we were talking national championships not NCAA championships.Anything pre August of 1973 doesn’t count as an NCAA Championship
I think there’s only one.For 2019, UCONN FB averaged a little over 10,200 in actual home attendance for each game. There are women’s basketball teams that draw larger average crowds.
Tickets scanned
Wagner: 10,701
Illinois: 14,133
South Florida: 10,715
Houston: 9,563
Navy: 10,462
East Carolina: 6,142
Average: 10,286
Nice fairy tale, and I wouldn’t take your stupid bridge if it was free. ESPN never killed the Big East. The Big East killed themselves when the Catholic Basketball schools voted no to inviting Penn State in 1982. I’d brush up on your history if I were you.Syracuse, BC, Louisville were part of the ESPN plan to destroy the BE, period. The others have been members of their current conferences long before any of this garbage, except Colorado, who somewhat fits your otherwise flawed reply.
If you don’t think all of this is about football $, why don’t we talk about a bridge I just put on the market?
Said the physics professor who stamped their checks with passing grades.No university gets an invitation to the SEC, ACC, B1G or the PAC12 unless they have a big time football program. Big time as in financially attractive to ESPN. FB pays the bills, always has. Those conferences are not looking to add new members that don’t “pay their way”.
The B1G paid out $54million to each of its 14 members last year. They aren’t dividing the pie more unless a new member(s) can bring the kind of pull needed to renegotiate the TV deal so that revenue and payments go up, not down. Think ND. Don’t think UCONN.
Same for the ACC, which paid $34million to each member, it’s ND or they take a hard pass. They don’t want to divide their pie into more pieces either unless the new member will pay their own way by enticing a new tv deal with ESPN. WV does not move the needle for ESPN, and only gets an ACC invite if ND enters first.
The SEC is getting ready to pay it’s members $61 million each. Once Texas/OU are officially in, that is expected to be renegotiated with ESPN to approximately $70million each, because Texas and OU bring big time FB programs to the table. They “pay their way” and add to the pie.
UCONN isn’t going to get any invites into conferences like that because they would be revenue draining rather than revenue adding. The schools in the last 4 major conferences already dwarf all others in revenue and annual payments to member schools. This will widen much much more as time goes by.
If anyone thinks that those riches won’t find their way into the NIL system for student athletes they are kidding themselves.
Two…I think there’s only one.
BC and Syracuse may have benefited financially on the football side, but its been years since their overall athletic program has been relevant in terms of wins and losses. Not sure this is a path for UConn to take.Doesn’t seem to bother BC or Syracuse flying all over the eastern third of the country. Not to mention a few OOC trips to Texas, sunny California or Hawaii.
Only a handful of the REALLY big schools in MegaConferences have revenue like that.The big schools have athletic dept. revenues in the $170 to $240 million range. Don't think we are in that club.
1 | Texas | Big 12 | $223,879,781 | $204,234,897 | $0 | 0.00 |
2 | Texas A&M | SEC | $212,748,002 | $169,012,456 | $0 | 0.00 |
3 | Ohio State | Big Ten | $210,548,239 | $220,572,956 | $0 | 0.00 |
4 | Michigan | Big Ten | $197,820,410 | $190,952,175 | $261,773 | 0.13 |
5 | Georgia | SEC | $174,042,482 | $143,299,554 | $3,508,850 | 2.02 |
6 | Penn State | Big Ten | $164,529,326 | $160,369,805 | $0 | 0.00 |
7 | Alabama | SEC | $164,090,889 | $185,317,681 | $2,654,551 | 1.62 |
8 | Oklahoma | Big 12 | $163,126,695 | $157,958,270 | $0 | 0.00 |
9 | Florida | SEC | $159,706,937 | $141,829,002 | $2,261,773 | 1.42 |
10 | LSU | SEC | $157,787,782 | $148,977,880 | $0 | 0.00 |
11 | Wisconsin | Big Ten | $157,660,107 | $154,621,828 | $3,029,000 | 1.92 |
12 | Florida State | ACC | $152,757,883 | $150,147,316 | $15,607,019 | 10.22 |
13 | Auburn | SEC | $152,455,416 | $139,260,711 | $5,261,252 | 3.45 |
14 | Iowa | Big Ten | $151,976,026 | $146,282,275 | $650,000 | 0.43 |
15 | Kentucky | SEC | $150,435,842 | $144,886,246 | $0 | 0.00 |
16 | Tennessee | SEC | $143,765,903 | $142,976,173 | $0 | 0.00 |
17 | South Carolina | SEC | $140,695,659 | $136,879,732 | $0 | 0.00 |
18 | Michigan State | Big Ten | $140,010,865 | $135,655,740 | $885,690 | 0.63 |
19 | Louisville | ACC | $139,955,824 | $151,167,940 | $5,923,817 | 4.23 |
20 | Arkansas | SEC | $137,497,788 | $129,620,361 | $0 | 0.00 |
21 | Nebraska | Big Ten | $136,233,460 | $124,148,206 | $0 | 0.00 |
22 | Clemson | ACC | $133,861,515 | $131,978,513 | $5,602,440 | 4.19 |
23 | Washington | Pac-12 | $133,792,677 | $131,317,636 | $4,151,964 | 3.10 |
24 | Minnesota | Big Ten | $130,456,454 | $129,450,256 | $7,972,732 | 6.11 |
25 | Indiana | Big Ten | $127,832,628 | $114,822,135 | $2,954,505 | 2.31 |
26 | Oregon | Pac-12 | $127,508,498 | $128,943,543 | $452,924 | 0.36 |
27 | Arizona State | Pac-12 | $121,698,840 | $118,404,377 | $19,356,134 | 15.90 |
28 | Kansas | Big 12 | $121,553,307 | $108,881,800 | $1,746,274 | 1.44 |
29 | Illinois | Big Ten | $118,565,501 | $120,168,951 | $8,652,815 | 7.30 |
30 | Mississippi State | SEC | $112,273,809 | $98,832,615 | $0 | 0.00 |
31 | Purdue | Big Ten | $110,844,907 | $102,026,477 | $0 | 0.00 |
32 | Virginia | ACC | $110,219,117 | $112,621,238 | $18,429,801 | 16.72 |
33 | Maryland | Big Ten | $108,796,303 | $108,785,924 | $25,363,715 | 23.31 |
34 | Mississippi | SEC | $108,442,428 | $113,013,400 | $3,095,396 | 2.85 |
35 | UCLA | Pac-12 | $108,412,967 | $127,339,042 | $2,577,213 | 2.38 |
36 | North Carolina | ACC | $107,812,619 | $110,809,706 | $9,163,374 | 8.50 |
37 | Missouri | SEC | $106,610,244 | $108,398,447 | $1,015,000 | 0.95 |
38 | Arizona | Pac-12 | $105,091,389 | $100,565,835 | $21,886,167 | 20.83 |
39 | Rutgers | Big Ten | $103,251,280 | $103,167,344 | $29,859,395 | 28.92 |
40 | West Virginia | Big 12 | $102,680,928 | $98,249,890 | $3,902,899 | 3.80 |
41 | Utah | Pac-12 | $99,526,695 | $96,000,514 | $12,594,513 | 12.65 |
42 | Virginia Tech | ACC | $96,772,489 | $93,961,068 | $10,278,338 | 10.62 |
43 | Texas Tech | Big 12 | $96,625,347 | $95,132,604 | $3,517,672 | 3.64 |
44 | Iowa State | Big 12 | $95,411,884 | $95,315,376 | $2,054,314 | 2.15 |
45 | Oklahoma State | Big 12 | $95,335,482 | $95,008,483 | $87,640 | 0.09 |
46 | Colorado | Pac-12 | $94,935,198 | $98,413,284 | $12,283,025 | 12.94 |
47 | North Carolina State | ACC | $92,724,548 | $90,100,025 | $6,851,989 | 7.39 |
48 | Kansas State | Big 12 | $89,919,822 | $83,079,244 | $0 | 0.00 |
49 | California | Pac-12 | $87,500,758 | $106,676,734 | $0 | 0.00 |
50 | Georgia Tech | ACC | $85,802,112 | $96,334,831 | $8,257,182 | 9.62 |
51 | Oregon State | Pac-12 | $82,058,386 | $82,364,021 | $11,811,725 | 14.39 |
52 | Connecticut | AAC | $80,900,404 | $80,814,173 | $43,856,484 | 54.21 |
53 | Houston | AAC | $75,049,955 | $73,678,308 | $48,372,196 | 64.45 |
54 | Washington State | Pac-12 | $71,691,339 | $76,258,966 | $5,462,015 | 7.62 |
55 | Central Florida | AAC | $69,121,887 | $67,916,343 | $31,739,067 | 45.92 |
56 | Cincinnati | AAC | $68,845,672 | $66,832,326 | $29,702,420 | 43.14 |
57 | Air Force | Mt. West | $60,009,782 | $54,192,115 | $40,851,962 | 68.08 |
58 | East Carolina | AAC | $59,970,346 | $56,281,920 | $37,692,722 | 62.85 |
59 | Colorado State | Mt. West | $56,081,379 | $54,289,162 | $23,735,343 | 42.32 |
60 | Memphis | AAC | $55,815,109 | $55,494,325 | $20,575,512 | 36.86 |
61 | South Florida | AAC | $55,045,769 | $53,569,756 | $32,033,551 | 58.19 |
62 | San Diego State | Mt. West | $54,731,404 | $55,379,174 | $29,222,098 | 53.39 |
63 | James Madison | CAA | $52,704,654 | $52,704,654 | $42,086,075 | 79.85 |
64 | Nevada-Las Vegas | Mt. West | $50,784,275 | $50,445,250 | $23,562,155 | 46.40 |
Well, you Northerners don't mind paying taxes.Actually, UCONN revenue is now at $35.3 million. AD total expenditures were $78.8 million, resulting in a deficit of $43.5 million.
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UConn athletic budget deficit increases to $43.5 million
The deficit is slightly higher than the $42.3 million from the year before and remains...www.nhregister.com
It’s absolutely all about UConn benefiting financially on the football side. You’re saying joining a power conference is detrimental to a schools success on the court or the field?????? Syracuse does btw have an excellent women’s basketball program and the men’s coach is in the HOF. GeezBC and Syracuse may have benefited financially on the football side, but its been years since their overall athletic program has been relevant in terms of wins and losses. Not sure this is a path for UConn to take.
Running an annual deficit in excess of $43million isn’t the path either, unless you are looking to have even more athletic programs eliminated than the four recently announced. UCONN is now only four programs away from the absolute minimum needed for an athletics department to operate at D1 level.BC and Syracuse may have benefited financially on the football side, but its been years since their overall athletic program has been relevant in terms of wins and losses. Not sure this is a path for UConn to take.
I think there’s only one.
There are two WBB programs (SC and Oregon) which average more in attendance than Husky FB. Apparently there can be more than one……
My message is a riff off of @CONN78SEJ's correction of your grammar error.There are two WBB programs (SC and Oregon) which average more in attendance than Husky FB. Apparently there can be more than one……
Yeah because the BE was just another conference after that; you’re the one espousing the importance of sports other than football and you prove my point because the greatest basketball conference in the history of CBB couldn’t hold itself together against the back door politicking of ESPN. You haven’t a clue.Nice fairy tale, and I wouldn’t take your stupid bridge if it was free. ESPN never killed the Big East. The Big East killed themselves when the Catholic Basketball schools voted no to inviting Penn State in 1982. I’d brush up on your history if I were you.
OKYeah because the BE was just another conference after that; you’re the one espousing the importance of sports other than football and you prove my point because the greatest basketball conference in the history of CBB couldn’t hold itself together against the back door politicking of ESPN. You haven’t a clue.
I take it you are not a season ticket holder or the father of a recruit Coach Edsall is recruiting?The decision to leave the AAC was made for basketball, but in doing so it completely chopped the legs off of the FB program, forcing it to independent status without a conference tv/media stream of revenue.
Now, saddled by a FB program bleeding close to $20million per year and an athletic department losing close to $45million per year, the school is forced to drop other sports. Independent status for FB only works if you are a ND with your own TV contract and a huge National following.
There will be no power four/five invitations sent to UCONN, not even if or when realignment goes to perhaps 4 conferences of 16 or more teams. Those invites will be exclusively for schools with healthy FB programs and those that can help a league generate more revenue. With the power conferences now paying their members between $30m and $60m per year (and climbing fast), those on the outside are looking at a bleak future.
UCONN generates around $34m per year in actual revenue when you subtract the money which the school must subsidize from their own pockets and student fees. They spend close to $80m annually on sports. The annual $44-45m deficit cannot sustain for long. Hard decisions are coming. There will not be a power conference lifeline to rescue UCONN.
The Athletic Dept. over the past ten years has failed in almost every conceivable way to maneuver the school in the new era. It is a sad tale of events highlighted in the SI article attached. The day comes when the best players and coaches will be found where the money is found.
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UConn Has Only Itself to Blame for Sports Cuts
A series of mistakes around its football program over the last decade cost the Huskies four sports.www.si.com
The decision to leave the AAC contributes to UConn deficit for football how exactly? On a net basis UConn in the Big East, a basketball only conference, makes the same (or more) money than they would in the American. We didn't have to invest in production facilities, which was a requirement under the ESPN contract. On a go forward basis we don't have to pay for production costs and the move from the AAC says us @$2M annually in travel costs.The decision to leave the AAC was made for basketball, but in doing so it completely chopped the legs off of the FB program, forcing it to independent status without a conference tv/media stream of revenue.
Now, saddled by a FB program bleeding close to $20million per year and an athletic department losing close to $45million per year, the school is forced to drop other sports. Independent status for FB only works if you are a ND with your own TV contract and a huge National following.
There will be no power four/five invitations sent to UCONN, not even if or when realignment goes to perhaps 4 conferences of 16 or more teams. Those invites will be exclusively for schools with healthy FB programs and those that can help a league generate more revenue. With the power conferences now paying their members between $30m and $60m per year (and climbing fast), those on the outside are looking at a bleak future.
UCONN generates around $34m per year in actual revenue when you subtract the money which the school must subsidize from their own pockets and student fees. They spend close to $80m annually on sports. The annual $44-45m deficit cannot sustain for long. Hard decisions are coming. There will not be a power conference lifeline to rescue UCONN.
The Athletic Dept. over the past ten years has failed in almost every conceivable way to maneuver the school in the new era. It is a sad tale of events highlighted in the SI article attached. The day comes when the best players and coaches will be found where the money is found.
![]()
UConn Has Only Itself to Blame for Sports Cuts
A series of mistakes around its football program over the last decade cost the Huskies four sports.www.si.com
That sounds ideal in some ways. The problem is that a football program is expensive to maintain regardless of whether it operates on "a national scale" or not. The apparent solution then seems for most schools to cut football. The issue with that is that football is the source of the money for major conferences.UConn is not the only school that is in this situation, though they may be deeper in the mud than many. As the landscape of college football changes with realignment and the continuing erosion of revenue from sports television continues, I foresee a limited number of "blue blood" programs continuing to operate successfully. The next round of TV contracts are not going to be as lucrative. They simply can't be. The majority of schools will not have the economic firepower to maintain a meaningful football program on a national scale in the coming years. The game will become regional again with regional rivalries that hold some interest so there will still be games worth attending, but I see only a dozen or so programs that will garner national attention and the revenue that goes with it. I don't see the idea of super conferences of 20 teams as being realistic or sustainable.
UCONN paid over $17m to leave the AAC, which pays it‘s members over $7m each per year. UCONN is paying the Big East $3.5m to enter the conference which pays it’s members a little over $4m per year.. Earlier this year, the AAC proudly announced its billion-dollar deal with ESPN, set to take effect in 2020-21. On paper, that deal yields about $7 million per school annually. The Big East, by contrast, gives its schools about $4.16 million per year.The decision to leave the AAC contributes to UConn deficit for football how exactly? On a net basis UConn in the Big East, a basketball only conference, makes the same (or more) money than they would in the American. We didn't have to invest in production facilities, which was a requirement under the ESPN contract. On a go forward basis we don't have to pay for production costs and the move from the AAC says us @$2M annually in travel costs.
There are arguments to be made that leaving the American hurts the football program (loss of bowl access, scheduling challenges etc.) but the net impact to the bottom line isn't one of them.
Also, if you want to talk about the football program, perhaps the women's basketball forum isn't the most logical place to do it?
#trollbetter
Pretty good, actually. The economics of the change of deal is explained in the post above. Did you read it? It is a net positive annually to UConn. Additionally Connecticut already has a deal that pays for it’s independent football games. How’s that for timing?UCONN paid over $17m to leave the AAC, which pays it‘s members over $7m each per year. UCONN is paying the Big East $3.5m to enter the conference which pays it’s members a little over $4m per year.
The bigger concern of course, is that FB now Is without any conference affiliation in a time when media/tv rights for FB are accelerating. The AAC’s new $1 billion media/TV contract begins in 2021, how’s that for timing?