nelsonmuntz
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- Aug 27, 2011
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Comparing us to FSU and Oklahoma academically is little more than trolling. Find a single national employer that feels that way.
Exactly. Even if it was breakable in theory, none of the Big Ten, Pac-12, Big 12 or ACC want to even test it because they have a direct vested interest in ensuring that a grant of rights is enforceable. Obviously, one can never say never. However, the structural paramaters are in place to end power conference realignment today that weren't in place before. A league like the Big Ten doesn't expand just for the sake of expanding (as much as people here might be skeptical of the Rutgers move, and I'm one of them, that school has been on the radar of the Big Ten for over 20 years - it didn't pop out of nowhere). Maryland, believe it or not, was one of those schools that the Big Ten has been waiting for over a long period of time and Rutgers got a lifeline as a result of that. For further realignment to happen, another piece that the Big Ten has been waiting for needs to shake loose. Those are schools like UVA and UNC. They don't include the likes of Missouri (who the Big Ten has passed over multiple times). The only way that I see a power conference making another move over the next decade is the Big 12 trying to get back up to 12 and they simply aren't enthused with their options.
Great post, Noey. I really fear that Warde and Manual are content to sit back and count championships instead of being hungry and pulling out all the stops to improve our situation. "So what if we are relegated to a crap conference. Kiss the rings!" UGHHHH...... so short sighted...Just when I think I'm over Sue and Warde sipping Mai Thais in the Bahamas, Frank has to come on here and tell us that we shouldn't be monitoring while the Oliver Lucks and Tom Jurich's are out pimping. Pimping ain't easy bitches. Today I had to read quotes from Warde puffing his chest out. Today, when the battle seems more lost than at any other time in conference realignment, you can quote him that we are kicking ass and taking names. Yet, when there was an opening in the ACC, for which we were considered front runners we were monitoring and landscaping. Promise to never post about that again. But damn it, WTF were people at UConn thinking? That Jurich just wanted to hear himself? God this irritates the out of me.
Great post, Noey. I really fear that Warde and Manual are content to sit back and count championships instead of being hungry and pulling out all the stops to improve our situation. "So what if we are relegated to a crap conference. Kiss the rings!" UGHHHH...... so short sighted...
It is not breakable in theory. When you sell your house, you can't come back 2 years later and change your mind. You sold your house. A GOR is basically the same principle.
frank is a bit chagrined that unc and uva aren't coming to the big. that's not a bad thing. if i played in the big ten sandbox, i'd only want perfumed beauties to enter, too.
at the same time, just cuz you didn't get what you want doesn't mean you won't get what you didn't want. an invite by the big ten will be decided based on carriage negotiations scheduled to start in the next few months. if nyc cable says you want a piece of this, then you jump as high as you have to.
does that mean that the big ten is told to get carriage:
a) you the big ten pay us to get on(not an out of the world stance)
or
b)you get sport tier coverage
or
c)you get basic at $.05 or $.90
Based on uconn's proven numbers with sny, insert uconn in the above negotiations. If cable doesn't satisfactorily bite based on rutgers and legacy big ten pull in metro ny, does addition of uconn make sense.
if the big ten writes off ny metro and only goes for nj, uconn is in trouble. somehow I don't see the big ten giving up on nyc, though. and something tells me silverman selling 365 days rutgers content to nyc will be met with quite a few jaws on the floor.
Breakable is an interesting concept. I don't think it is "breakable" per se, but I also don't necessarily think that a breach of that agreement can't be compensated with money damages. So school X decides that they want to leave conference Y. Is anyone going to tell them the can't? Of course not. But due to the GOR they'd have to pay their TV money to conference X. Say that was worth, oh I don't know, $52M. What stops X from litigating whether that number should be reduced? Now Y might say you gave up your rights, but X could say well they were only worth Z back then so we shouldn't have to pay the new value of 5Z now and since we're paying you lump sum and up front that Z should be a reduced value = to 1/3 Z...or whatever. If a money differential between conferences is great enough, movement between conferences will still occur.
Frank once you agree that this is about money then the GOR starts to sound an awful lot like a prohibitive exit fee. Those are always more 'iron clad' in theory than in practice.Well, yes, if you pay enough money, then you can get out of any contract. Realistically, the amount of a buyout for a GOR for a power conference would be cost prohibitive.
I agree regarding research budget and whether or not you're an FBS school is irrelevant. It is true, though, that Miami is really the only school that does have FBS football that approaches that metric at this time. Expansion of the AAU is also glacial. Since 1999, it has added 4 total members, but also had 4 members leave, so the addition of BU was simply to get back up to the membership level that it had 14 years ago. The BU "threshold" isn't something that's easily met, either. That will take a ton of resources (frankly, much more than the athletic department spending).
Also, UConn certainly has invested a lot in football facilities. However, are UConn's facilities better than what Louisville built? Are they better than what Cincinnati has (or will have)? That's what I mean by a "We'll be fine" approach. Believe me - there are other Gang of Five schools trying to one-up each other to supplant UConn and Cincinnati as being the perceived "next in line". You don't think the Big 12 (which might actually be a possibility for UConn) won't take a hard look at UNLV if it ends up building a new football palace in the heart of an untapped large metro area that everyone loves traveling to (maybe pairing them up with BYU in expansion)? You're not competing with just Cincinnati, anymore. The Big 12 can literally go in any direction geographically, so even the plans of MWC schools could very much matter to UConn's long term prospects. There is no such thing as "good enough" in terms of facilities, academics, TV markets, etc. in conference realignment going forward.
This isn't to knock UConn. In a vacuum, the school has solid academics, elite men's and women's basketball, and a good location near Hartford and between NYC and Boston. It is the type of school that *should* be in a power conference. However, these decisions aren't being made in a vacuum. In order to get a power conference invite at this point, you have to blow away the competition, and that means beating Cincinnati, UNLV, etc. on all of the relevant metrics.