CL82
NCAA Woman's Basketball National Champions
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And yet, Rutgers will still be ringing up epic deficits
My point was that outside of the SEC/B1G the decisions have been atrocious.I’m sure I’ll regret asking, but “stupid” for who exactly? Who in the SEC B1G thinks any of this is stupid?
Reminds me of this.So it's a "gold standard" consultant that he won't reveal the name of?
Thats's so cute
bobbyinaz posted:
How stupid was the ACC, when they passed on adding UConn & Rutgers, who combined with Cuse would've given the conference a stranglehold on NYC and caused the ACC Network to start much sooner?
Well......the problem is that the ACC was and is an ESPN property.
And while New York may be sweet, the ESPN bees don't know it.
New York is not an ESPN college football top market (not in top 10 ESPN college football markets)...
Louisville is #4...
bobbyinaz posted:
How stupid was the ACC, when they passed on adding UConn & Rutgers, who combined with Cuse would've given the conference a stranglehold on NYC and caused the ACC Network to start much sooner?
Well......the problem is that the ACC was and is an ESPN property.
And while New York may be sweet, the ESPN bees don't know it.
New York is not an ESPN college football top market (not in top 10 ESPN college football markets)...
Louisville is #4...
bobbyinaz posted:
How stupid was the ACC, when they passed on adding UConn & Rutgers, who combined with Cuse would've given the conference a stranglehold on NYC and caused the ACC Network to start much sooner?
Well......the problem is that the ACC was and is an ESPN property.
And while New York may be sweet, the ESPN bees don't know it.
New York is not an ESPN college football top market (not in top 10 ESPN college football markets)...
Louisville is #4...
Beat me too itAnd this means what? All of these but 1 are owned by ESPN and, quite frankly, are rather small. Here are the size ranks of each.
Birmingham - 40
New Orleans - 53
Richmond - 58
Louisville - 50
Greenville, Spartanburg, Asheville - 58
Knoxville - 59
Greensboro, High Pointe, Winston-Salem - 46
Charlotte - 24
Memphis - 48
Columbus - 32
I know these place are high ratings places, but the size of these markets are very small. Most don’t even rate in the top 25 with Columbus a Big10 town.
I get the point of being a regional conference with rivalries that transcend sports. One of the reasons there’s so much rivalry between UM and OSU is there an intense rivalry between the states that existed before the 1st football game was ever played. The games played and incidences that occurred (the snow bowl, both UM and OSU running up the score, the 10 year war, OSU slowing down the UM players from entering Ohio Stadium in ‘06 by having the sheriffs and their police dogs go through every bag before they could enter the locker room).
What’s the reason for playing big time athletics? Why spend all of that money? Why do so many schools go into the red for their athletic programs? Most would say to win championships, but why is that important? The reason I believe is the same reason many schools are building new dorms, academic buildings and facilities. It’s why many wealthy suburban public and private schools are building new buildings, refurbishing and refreshing older buildings. To attract new students/ families. I’m a teacher and coach here in Michigan. My principal says that new families don’t shop houses, they shop schools and purchase houses accordingly so their kids can attend that school.
Being able to market their school to a nationwide audience is huge. A true nation wide audience. It’s why ND values their independence (at the administrative level). It’s why Rutgers, UMD, USC and, to a lesser extent, USC are now in the Big10. Marketing your schools to a wider audience.
I’d be interested in seeing what Fox’s top 10 markets are. I’m sure NYC, DC, Chicago and Philly aren’t on the list, but I bet #11 Detroit and #17 Cleveland are.
Kind of a head scratcher that the ACC didn’t try to dominate the northeastern megalopolis last time. If they took UCONN with some kind of arrangement to get Villanova to the FBS they could have dominated in basketball and in the largest TV markets in the countryMaybe NYC isn't a top market for ESPN because they're showing Syracuse games.
If you have a bunch of households that don't watch college football on ESPN...size of market does not matter....particularly when it is eyeballs watching that prices advertising. Market matters less than actual numbers watching.
ESPN and the ACC was already was carried in most set top boxes in New York (and on YES)...but folks watch pro sports...so adding a college football team, you look for where eyeballs will watch it...and it was not New York.
Yes, Rutgers brought set top boxes and a some viewers as a NY home team....But the south was clearly where people turned on ESPN to watch college football.
He added: “Here’s one thing that people seem to forget about our move with Rutgers and Maryland. At the time, the ACC was looking to expand. Part of our move was to protect Penn State. Everyone forgets we had a teammate and partner institution that was on a [geographic] island, so what we did, beyond gaining exposure, is we further brought in a valued partner in Penn State. Had Penn State defected to the ACC, what would the conversation have been then?”
The ACC could have added UConn, West Virginia, and Rutgers. Three state schools that were all pretty good at football at the time (UConn actually beat Louisville in football the year the ACC added Louisville for "football reasons").If you have a bunch of households that don't watch college football on ESPN...size of market does not matter....particularly when it is eyeballs watching that prices advertising. Market matters less than actual numbers watching.
ESPN and the ACC was already was carried in most set top boxes in New York (and on YES)...but folks watch pro sports...so adding a college football team, you look for where eyeballs will watch it...and it was not New York.
Yes, Rutgers brought set top boxes and a some viewers as a NY home team....But the south was clearly where people turned on ESPN to watch college football.
And...lest we forget..Rutgers was not really about New York. It was Delaney's fear after the ACC announced Notre Dame realtionship...fear of the ACC poaching Penn State...cut 'em off at the pass .Ohio State AD Gene Smith Says Maryland, Rutgers Helped Prevent ACC From Poaching Penn State
Ohio State AD Gene Smith Says Maryland, Rutgers Helped Prevent ACC From Poaching Penn State
Smith admits that there was a fear that the ACC could poach Penn State, so part of the selling point on adding Maryland and Rutgers was to give PSU some neighboring programs.
Got a link from the article where you pulled that excerpt from?
This article w/ a similar headline also includes this:
-> Delany, who came aboard in 1989 and will retire in June 2020, brought unprecedented wealth and exposure to the conference by adding Penn State and Nebraska and then Maryland and Rutgers. Big Ten schools hand out television money hand over fist every year, and Delany is as much of a reason for that as any. He played a role in the development of Big Ten Network, and let’s not forget that by adding Rutgers, the Big Ten landed in the New York television and media market, as well, and all the dollars and cents that come with it. Maryland brought BTN expanded east coast eyeballs too, which equals additional cable dollars and more revenue. <-
"Jim [Delany] felt that someday, if we didn’t have anyone else in that corridor, someday it wouldn't make sense maybe for Penn State to be in our league. That they would go into a league somewhere on the east coast. By doing that, it keeps us in the northeast corridor."
Be something if he muddies the move for UCLA and the B1G takes another PAC school instead. And UCLA ends up SOL.Newsom won’t do a thing but flail around like a little kid throwing a temper tantrum. He has no power here and he has to be wary of the UCLA alumni and fans. If I am reading the situation correctly, UCLA alumni/fans are just a bit more invested in their athletics than Berkeley alumni/fans are. It’s a fine line he is playing and the average Cali resident probably doesn’t care.
bobbyinaz posted:
How stupid was the ACC, when they passed on adding UConn & Rutgers, who combined with Cuse would've given the conference a stranglehold on NYC and caused the ACC Network to start much sooner?
Well......the problem is that the ACC was and is an ESPN property.
And while New York may be sweet, the ESPN bees don't know it.
New York is not an ESPN college football top market (not in top 10 ESPN college football markets)...
Louisville is #4...
You have to ask why...just why...New York isn't a top ESPN college football audience....data is data.
Could it be that New England just is not a college football watching area?
Sure..big metro's have the big population numbers...important if you count boxes on TV's. But if you want actual audiences that watch your college football product..welll then....
You have to ask...Why would places like Birmingham, Richmond, Greenville/Asheville, Greensboro-High Point, NC, Louisville outrank New York, Chicago, Denver, etc....for ESPN college football watching.
We all like to believe what we believe....but data is data...and ESPN's top 10 markets for college football are not northern outside of Columbus, Ohio.
Dayooper...answered your question?
Did you ask it of me? Please link.
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Ohio State AD Gene Smith Says Maryland, Rutgers Helped Prevent ACC From Poaching Penn State
In the last major round of conference realignment, the Big Ten poached Maryland from the ACC, and Rutgers from the AAC (formerly of the Big East). Half athespun.com
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Alvarez: B1G added to avoid losing PSU
Just when we thought Barry Alvarez had made enough headlines for one week, the Wisconsin athletic director/interim football coach gave us another delicious gem.www.espn.com
Big Ten targeted Maryland partly because it feared losing Penn State
Famous University of Maryland alumni
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