Not sure I agree. This is about football and Duke is not a state school like the others. Football is king and potential is king. UVA and UNC have tons more potential in football imho.Any conference will take Duke if Duke asks.
You have 3 very solid conf. (B1G, PAC, SEC) and a fourth that is a notch below (Big 12), then 2 others that are clearly behind the rest. Once the Alphas are done picking there aren't enough scraps to leave the 5th with the quality of the other 4.Can I ask this...why does there have to be 4 super conferences? What is wrong with 5? I imagine it's easier to fill bowls with 4 conferences?
I don't think there's anything wrong with it, per se. But, if you have a television network and need to fill airtime, more teams allow you to do that effectively than fewer teams. B1G already has a network, SEC is launching one, P12 I think is as well (may be wrong). You need content to justify its existence.Can I ask this...why does there have to be 4 super conferences? What is wrong with 5? I imagine it's easier to fill bowls with 4 conferences?
It makes sense that the B12 would go for the kill on the ACC. Everyone says the B1G, SEC, and PAC are set as top 3. If there is going to be a big 4 why give the ACC a chance to reel in ND (I don't think that's happening, but it's possible) and potentially stepping into a tie for the 4 spot.
Unfortunately, I'm now in revenge mode. I want the ACC to implode because they killed the conference I loved. I'd feel this way even if UConn got the Maryland spot (about still hating the ACC, although I probably wouldn't be hoping for it's death). I still think the ACC is UConn's only possible landing spot. If FSU, Clemson, Miami, GT, UNC, UVA, etc. leave UConn is still on the outside looking in and the teams that kept us out are in a safe new home.
I guess at least Swofford's would be out of a job and some of our ex-Big East brethren that got a bit too cocky about their escape would get a "ha ha" moment (said in a Nelson voice (the Nelson from the Simpsons, not from this board)).
Couldn't the same thing have been said before Rutgers and Maryland were added to the Big 10? If it was going to happen, it would have happened before the Big 10 added that dead weight. Except then something new happened.
I don't buy Duke to the B1G at all, but the other two...
I like this rumor. It doesn't make a ton of sense, but at least it's different. Why would FSU want to tie themselves to Miami when it's pretty clear that conferences are more interested in adding different states than colleges. Now Clemson, FSU and GTech to the B12 would make some sense if the B12 really wants to make a kill shot to the ACC
So....the networks in contract renegotiation won't care about markets??? Of course they will! That's the point. Follow the money...
(said in a Nelson voice (the Nelson from the Simpsons, not from this board)).
I actually think 2 things changed this year, jericho. The Big 10 taking Rutgers and Maryland changed the game. the Maryland change in particular demonstrates that the ACC isn't as stable as folks once thought. The second change was that Fox and the other major confereneces are pushing the B-12 to go to a conference game, something they weren't doing previously. By most reports, the B-12 actually liked the round robin approach, but the other conferences didn't. The thinking goes, why should Alabama be at risk when the B-12 champ is not? So those two factors are pushing Floida State to look in a new direction and the B-12 to look for members.
Yes and No. Markets are not completely irrelevant. But they're not everything either. You have to actually deliever a market for it to really work. The idea of adding a Georgia Tech to deliever Atlanta or the U to deliever Miami is a fallacy. It just won't happen. When ESPN or Fox is paying money for broadcast rights, they do so in order to get programming people want to watch. They want ratings. If Georgia Tech really got everyone in Atlanta to tune in to their games, GT games would be rated high. But they're not.
As proven by the Big East, having schools in large markets does not mean huge money. Houston, Tulane, Memphis, Temple, SMU, Central Florida. These schools are all in large cities. Yet, when most of the schools were in C-USA, no one gave a crap. It's for those same reasons that conferences weren't falling over themselves to add Rutgers. Rutgers does not deliever a huge market share, despite being located in a very populous area.
The Big 10 model helps change that. They want cable providers like Verizon and Comcast to bundle their network to basic subscribers for high carriage fees. You get a big enough market and even if only some of them actually get the network, it's still a good chunk of change. And even if only a portion of the people that get the channel actually watch it, it does not matter (unless the carriage fees get to high and providers drop the network since not enough people care). You are collecting money from everyone that has the channel on their cable package.
This model only works with a Network. If a network is put on a majority of cable packages in a populous area, then the network and hence the conference make good money. But selling the individual rights to those schools may be problematic. It only works if people care about the teams. The Big 10 operates on the former. The Big 12 on the latter. For the Big 12, it only makes sense to add schools that people want to watch. Hence FSU and Clemson often get mentioned.
The idea that markets equal money is a huge over-simplification.
It makes a four team playoff much easier to accomplish. Just take the champion of each conference and no one can complain. Besides the schools left out of the cartel. I definitely think 20 school conferences are a possibility. Who knows, maybe even 26 team conferences are possible. 13 team divisions. Play all 12 games within the division. 4 x 26 = 106. That'll cover all the schools that are worthy.Can I ask this...why does there have to be 4 super conferences? What is wrong with 5? I imagine it's easier to fill bowls with 4 conferences?
The GOR is too hard to beat. The conference that added Kansas would not have the rights to Kansas' TV content, making Kansas' basically worthless to the Big 10.
And all this time I thought you have been saying football drives the bus. So the BE messed things up by letting the football schools leave but the ACC doesn't need the only real football schools in their inventory. Makes no sense to me.I am still skeptical about the "breakup" of the ACC. I don't think Carolina, Duke even Virginia really want to go. They'll try and up the anti from ESPN then decide where they want to be. they are even a worse fit for the SEC. They just aren't good enouogh, and when UNC tried to become that good, they got in trouble. And I don't think losing Florida State and Clemson is that big a deal anyway. Florida State has always been a fish out of water in the ACC and Clemson is, well, Clemson. Last year they won the ACC last year for the first time since 1991, the year before Florida State came aboard. Clemson is the definition of nothing special. The ACC would miss Florida State, I think, but not for too long. The Seminoles would pretty quickly become an also ran in the B-12 and be forgotten as a power. Even if you lost both FSU and Clemson, you'd have a decent conference.
How come no one ever talks about the Pac-12? All the focus is east. For this 16 team superconference thing to come into being the Pac-10 has to take 4 from the Big12, and then that leaves 6 teams in the 12. It's likelier at that point that you'd have a merger between the B(12)6 and the 6 from the ACC which = 12. ND? Who knows. UConn and Cincy would bring that league to 14. If ND joins one of the leagues, there's only a spot for one more.
They are Australia - limited access to everyone but not many can attack them. Their bests options are limited. They are hoping the LHN struggles.How come no one ever talks about the Pac-12? All the focus is east. For this 16 team superconference thing to come into being the Pac-10 has to take 4 from the Big12, and then that leaves 6 teams in the 12. It's likelier at that point that you'd have a merger between the B(12)6 and the 6 from the ACC which = 12. ND? Who knows. UConn and Cincy would bring that league to 14. If ND joins one of the leagues, there's only a spot for one more.
Initially I thought it sounded crazy but the more you think about it schools have to be investigating every opportunity and scenario.A few years ago FSU and Clemson to the BIG 12 would sound nuts. Today nuts is the new landscape so anything is possible. Fans, message boards and tweets can't be blamed for picking up on the rumors because very often the rumors find a way of becoming reality.Or not.FSU, Clemson, Miami and someone else to announce for Big 12 soon.
The 3 stooges of the WVU board are all circle jerking about this, but in a twist, an FSU "insider" who usually calls them idiots is now saying that his "sources" say that Clemson and FSU will pitch themselves as a package deal to the SEC and if the SEC says no, will go to the Big 12.
I wonder if the "insiders" script this stuff out, because geauxnoles is like a wrestler who suddenly switches sides, and all the fans are stunned. I wonder if the owners of the BGN board are in on it in order to boost page views.
You are only paranoid until someone kills you!Initially I thought it sounded crazy but the more you think about it schools have to be investigating every opportunity and scenario.A few years ago FSU and Clemson to the BIG 12 would sound nuts. Today nuts is the new landscape so anything is possible. Fans, message boards and tweets can't be blamed for picking up on the rumors because very often the rumors find a way of becoming reality.Or not.
Any conference will take Duke if Duke asks.
A private school with a crappy football team?
Um, no.
Now Clemson, FSU and GTech to the B12 would make some sense if the B12 really wants to make a kill shot to the ACC