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Yogi was 5'7". Pele 5'8". Maradona 5'5". What's your point?No argument that Messi is not an elite athlete. That said, he's only 5' 7".
Yogi was 5'7". Pele 5'8". Maradona 5'5". What's your point?No argument that Messi is not an elite athlete. That said, he's only 5' 7".
Don't you know that only men with over active pituitary can be great elite, great athletes?Yogi was 5'7". Pele 5'8". Maradona 5'5". What's your point?
And along those lines, size alone with no skill can bring the appearance of an athlete. See Hasheem Thabeet.Don't you know that only men with over active pituitary can be great elite, great athletes?
Gotta be 6'-8" 270 lbs., be able to jump out of the arena and hit a 24 foot jumper with seem regularity. LeBron does flop to draw a foul with the best of them, so maybe he does belong on a soccer field.
Yes, now. A bidding war could erupt however. If Cinci is in the Big XII, and UConn gets B1G overtures, the ACC has a problem if it expects ND to join. It has zero acceptable candidates remaining. It's a big poker game right now, and nobody is showing their cards. Once the hands start coming out it could change rapidly.
Dooley said:Respectfully disagree. You're either in the $25M-$50M/yr club or you're in the $1M/yr club. With the exception of a few small potatoes schools, those in the latter would chop off their limbs to get into the former. The only way our leverage would improve is if Mike Aresco can wave some sort of magic wand and get us MUCH closer to the $25M/yr club. I don't think that will happen. The best he could do would be possibly get us half of the way there...but even then, I think that's quite a stretch and very unlikely.
But let's say our leverage does improve...if we turn down an invitation to the B1G over a backloaded contract offer, I will march to Storrs with torches and pitchforks (as would the entire state).
Seriously. Any school outside of the P5 right now has absolutely zero negotiating leverage. The B12 could offer Memphis or Houston $1 for the first 10 years before getting a full share and they would take it in a heartbeat.
Not true, for several reasons:
1. The B12 will lose its top programs by 2025 at the latest, meaning that ten years at $1 leaves you at least $30 mn behind your AAC colleagues and in the same boat in 2025 (as B12 will be arguably worse than the AAC). If AAC gets a nice uptick in the next contract, from $3 mn per year to say $8 mn, you could be $70-80 mn behind.
2. If Texas or Oklahoma has an exit from the GoR and leave early, then you may not even get the prestige benefit to make up for the loss of money.
You have to keep in mind the possibility that Oklahoma and Texas have exits already prepared, and that B12 expansion is really about protecting Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, and other weak sisters, as ESPN and Fox cannot terminate the TV contract if the number of teams stays above a threshold. The conference you are entering may not be a P5 for long and you have to be sure you are getting paid adequately.
Respectfully disagree. You're either in the $25M-$50M/yr club or you're in the $1M/yr club. With the exception of a few small potatoes schools, those in the latter would chop off their limbs to get into the former. The only way our leverage would improve is if Mike Aresco can wave some sort of magic wand and get us MUCH closer to the $25M/yr club. I don't think that will happen. The best he could do would be possibly get us half of the way there...but even then, I think that's quite a stretch and very unlikely.
But let's say our leverage does improve...if we turn down an invitation to the B1G over a backloaded contract offer, I will march to Storrs with torches and pitchforks (as would the entire state).
I think you just described Fishy.Gotta be 6'-8" 270 lbs...
Yogi was 5'7". Pele 5'8". Maradona 5'5". What's your point?
The $1 per school point is ridiculous. Nobody would offer that. It would be a delayed revenue stream, nothing more.
The Big 12 dollar would get UConn it's tier 3 rights back.
They would set themselves on fire for that deal - between tier3 and additional ticket sales be $10 million plus a year better off.
That would be money made up elsewhere. Since we are evaluating deals. The next AAC deal should, if Aresco is any good be around $10M. I'd shoot for what the ACC is getting but would have to accept something closer to what they were getting before their latest deal.
A $10M deal would not be acceptable for a term longer than a handful of years and it would need to escalate consistent with the equity we'd add. A buy-in period is perfectly acceptable, akin to the distribution of the old BE credits. But as with the BE credits, some of that was shared with the new members of the AAC even thought they didn't earn it. I realize that the payout was a lot higher because the newcomers had leverage in forming the new league, but the same principle applies. Any new school is a partner, not a hired servant, except maybe to Texas.
And while we are at it, there will be a number G5 for the B12 or any conference they will want the best of the breed, which does limit their choices else they add a Rutgers without the cable boxes that make them so charming.
whaler11 said:No offense but LOL. There is no way the AAC deal is going up 500%.
I suppose it depends on their ability to talk to multiple providers. The new AAC was hampered by a lack of ratings history and the matching clause in the old BE contract.
They now have a decent ratings history and hopefully would be free to talk to other networks. A 500% bump up of squadouche isn't the same. The market for mediocre football is somewhere just below the ACC. They should be able to get a nice bump.
I suppose it depends on their ability to talk to multiple providers. The new AAC was hampered by a lack of ratings history and the matching clause in the old BE contract.
They now have a decent ratings history and hopefully would be free to talk to other networks. A 500% bump up of squadouche isn't the same. The market for mediocre football is somewhere just below the ACC. They should be able to get a nice bump.
It is absurd. What about CR is not absurd? What is the ACC getting over 10 years?5x the current money over a ten year deal is 1.2 billion dollars. I mean come on - that's absurd as soon as you get to the 'b'.
It is absurd. What about CR is not absurd? What is the ACC getting over 10 years?
Peons? Hardly.Contrary to what people here want to beleive it's a lot more valuable.
They also wouldn't get their deal today - they are very lucky it was signed and long term.
ESPN is laying off peons they pay nothing to. The market has already changed - if you don't have something high end to sell you are in trouble.
Peons? Hardly.
If every one of the 350 being let go makes even the lowest of six figures, that is $35,000,000, plus benefits and tax expense, which roughly equate to 33-50% of gross wages.
ESPN Layoffs Begin Tomorrow: 350 Employees, Six-Figure Earners