- Joined
- Jul 28, 2021
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FWIW:
Well, if they not reach out they would not be doing their job. But the GoR will likely make it unfeasible to move.
FWIW:
FWIW:
I don’t believe it’s true as presented in the tweet but the motivation could be FOMO. ACC is getting lapped by SEC and B1G $$ wise.If true, there are going to be a lot of SEC teams vying for a spot in the Birmingham Bowl with 7-5 records.
ACC programs get a lot of money and being a big fish in a medium pond offers a better route to the playoff than a below average sized fish in a lake. If you want the competition, play OoC games.
I don't believe it is true. The ACC GOR runs through 2035 and ESPN already owns the ACC. What is the motivation?
That is true from a program standpoint, but realignment begins and ends with who pays for the product. What reason would ESPN have to pay more for Clemson and FSU?I don’t believe it’s true as presented in the tweet but the motivation could be FOMO. ACC is getting lapped by SEC and B1G $$ wise.
Perhaps the end game is to make a superconference/consortium that in essence becomes akin to being MLB while sifting out as many AAA clubs from the bigs (or at least diluting the impact the AAA clubs have on the economic pie)?That is true from a program standpoint, but realignment begins and ends with who pays for the product. What reason would ESPN have to pay more for Clemson and FSU?
All well and good. But huge chunks of the country are going to tune out.As you guys are aware, I have always maintained that people watch marquis match ups. Brands.
The SEC has cornered major brands...Texas-LSU and Oklahoma-Alabama is of more interest than Indiana-Wisconsin or Wake Forest-Georgia Tech. ESPN has been evolving and the handwriting was on the wall when CBS had been paying the SEC $55 million per year for the one SEC Game of the Week.....and ESPN upped that to $300 million...
That one SEC game costs them almost what the whole year of ACC games does.
ESPN will have what amounts to NFL Saturdays. Big time programs with the best athletes that money can influence.
And...where things get murky..is that ESPN owns the SEC brand and is also the largest sports media outlet.
They will, as they have been doing, shill the SEC since they own it...their talking heads will play it up even during other games, the SEC games will dominate available band width in the prime hours of watching...all influencing public perception, rankings, etc...
And soon we will see lesser brands, like the ACC, relegated to the ACCN, ESPN+, etc.
The joke about E SEC PN will have become reality.
Fox will try to counter with their brands....it could be a binary world, kind of like Fox News is now to one set of viewers and CNN to the other set.
But no matter what, with streaming, we will be able to watch most of the teams of our choosing..
..and like in the story we read our kids..Horton Hears a Who....
“Don't give up! I believe in you all. A person's a person, no matter how small! And you very small persons will not have to die. If you make yourselves heard! So come on, now, and TRY!”
The broadcast rights for the home games of FSU and Clemson have an estimated value. They're worth what they're worth. Broadcasters add the estimated values of member schools together when crafting media contract proposals to a league.That is true from a program standpoint, but realignment begins and ends with who pays for the product. What reason would ESPN have to pay more for Clemson and FSU?
The broadcast rights for the home games of FSU and Clemson have an estimated value. They're worth what they're worth. Broadcasters add the estimated values of member schools together when crafting media contract proposals to a league.
The Tigers and Seminoles would receive more from the SEC because their new conference mates' broadcast rights would on average be worth a lot more than their current league partners.
FSU and Clemson would only add value to the SEC if their broadcast rights are worth more than the average of existing members.
There are any number of good reasons why they would.Broadcast value is not estimated in this case. ESPN owns the rights for both the ACC and soon, the SEC. Why would they elect to pay more for two schools in the SEC, when they are getting them for a comparable bargain in the ACC?
Well, until now.I've been a sports fan all my life, and many of my friends love sports.
Never once in my life have I discussed NASCAR with anyone.
ESPN wouldn't pay more. The broadcast rights to the home games of Florida State and Clemson cost ESPN about the same regardless of conference affiliation.Broadcast value is not estimated in this case. ESPN owns the rights for both the ACC and soon, the SEC. Why would they elect to pay more for two schools in the SEC, when they are getting them for a comparable bargain in the ACC?
No, that’s the Dude of WV… MH I’m sure lives in a trailer at least.Is MH the guy who lives in his mothers basement?
You’re turn Clemson:
There are any number of good reasons why they would.
For one, they'd love to stop subsidizing Wake Forest, BC, Syracuse, Pitt and Va Tech.
Two, the FSU President couldn't have been clearer this week when he said FSU HAS TO explore joining the SEC.
In many ways this is bigger than ESPN. They want a super conference outside the NCAA and Florida State might remember way back when it was way outside the top leagues looking in. FSU has been a top football school for 55 years now. Before that, it was like Cincinnati. Granted that's a very long time, but some of these folks have long memories.
The tweet above throws cold water on the rumor mill about Clemson and FSU--did the tweeter miss the fact that the President of FSU gave an interview about all of this?
It would have to be very special.The full interview is not quoted by the twitterati...the rest of the story...where President Thrasher says that the GOR makes it near impossible for FSU to actually leave the ACC.
“At the end of the day, it’s all about money,” Thrasher said. “It’s all about TV revenue, contracts. Nobody can leave a conference without a significant buyout penalty, including us, so it would have to be something very special for us to leave.
I think he is pushing the ACC to do what it can...take a couple of schools, etc.
Why now for the B1G? It could have added Kansas at any point.That kind of bugs me a bit. I feel like KU is a variation on Connecticut with less basketball success and documented history of basketball cheating.
Oh but they are AAU... probably cheat to get grants too.