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- Aug 26, 2011
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A couple of points:
1.
Just saw an article that said New Jersey is dead last, losing more residents per capita than every other state. But here's the thing--the losses are really not big compared to the population. Which means the population shift to the south is moving so gradually that we'll be dead by the time sports entities are cashing in because of it.
2.
While I totally buy the argument that the B1G wanted the New Jersey and Maryland recruiting grounds, you can't lump in all of New England in such a fashion. Connecticut, for instance, had several kids drafted into the NFL one year (Spievey, Hernandez, Campbell, etc.). I've seen measures where Conn. comes out around 35-40 in the ranking. It produced an amount that was relatively similar to NJ.
http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id...in-big-ten-expanding-include-maryland-rutgers
In this link, for instance, it's there with Wisconsin and West Virginia and in the same middling category as New Jersey.
Penn State and Iowa, in particular, have been recruiting Conn. for ages taking multiple players yearly (Iowa not so much anymore). So, lumping all of New England together when there are 4 sparsely populated states with hardly any football (though every once in a while a Kendall Reyes comes out of New Hampshire) is like saying there is no football talent in the Mountain West (Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Nevada) but that neglects Utah which does produce talent.
3. About ala carte TV...
It will work for me because I will buy ESPN, SNY and one other person in the house watches SCI-FI. That's it. That's all we watch, nothing else other than the networks. I am highly confident I will be charged less than $20 for these. But Frank is probably right that it might not work for those who watch 50 channels. I don't know who those people are but I can't imagine watching 50 channels.
4. Is the BTN model so powerful that it charges a decent amount in its footprint? Probably, but then how can you explain Eastern PA. There are a lot of rabid PSU fans there. Is BTN encountering Comcast resistance? What explains the low monthly fees in that region?
1.
NJ is "growing faster than the national average"
Just saw an article that said New Jersey is dead last, losing more residents per capita than every other state. But here's the thing--the losses are really not big compared to the population. Which means the population shift to the south is moving so gradually that we'll be dead by the time sports entities are cashing in because of it.
2.
So, you have to realize that demographically, New England *isn't* a big growth area and when it comes to football recruiting, it's literally the worst region on a per capita basis (and even bad on an absolute basis compared to places with much smaller populations like Hawaii) in the country.
While I totally buy the argument that the B1G wanted the New Jersey and Maryland recruiting grounds, you can't lump in all of New England in such a fashion. Connecticut, for instance, had several kids drafted into the NFL one year (Spievey, Hernandez, Campbell, etc.). I've seen measures where Conn. comes out around 35-40 in the ranking. It produced an amount that was relatively similar to NJ.
http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id...in-big-ten-expanding-include-maryland-rutgers
In this link, for instance, it's there with Wisconsin and West Virginia and in the same middling category as New Jersey.
Penn State and Iowa, in particular, have been recruiting Conn. for ages taking multiple players yearly (Iowa not so much anymore). So, lumping all of New England together when there are 4 sparsely populated states with hardly any football (though every once in a while a Kendall Reyes comes out of New Hampshire) is like saying there is no football talent in the Mountain West (Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Nevada) but that neglects Utah which does produce talent.
3. About ala carte TV...
It will work for me because I will buy ESPN, SNY and one other person in the house watches SCI-FI. That's it. That's all we watch, nothing else other than the networks. I am highly confident I will be charged less than $20 for these. But Frank is probably right that it might not work for those who watch 50 channels. I don't know who those people are but I can't imagine watching 50 channels.
4. Is the BTN model so powerful that it charges a decent amount in its footprint? Probably, but then how can you explain Eastern PA. There are a lot of rabid PSU fans there. Is BTN encountering Comcast resistance? What explains the low monthly fees in that region?