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In regards to Tier 3, Texas gets $15M from LHN and $9M for radio/internet and other media rights through IMG for a total of $24M
If I understand correctly, and the light bulb went off with WestCoast's post - is that tier 3 is basically what Delaney had the foresight to consolidate for the big 10 a long time ago, in forming the big 10 network. So ceding rights isn't necessarily a bad thing, if the conference is going to form it's own television network.
I'm not sure it's a good thing for us, right now to be doing, if a big east network is to be formed, b/c it sure looks like our tier 3 rights are a lot more valueable than others in this confererence, and there's the whole thing about hybrid membership, and Notre dame.
I think that if I'm understainding correctly, maintaining your own freedom to do what you want with your tier-3 broadcasting rights, is probably what the glue behind this thing is right now.
All just internet rumor and speculation of course.
I have a simple question - if tier 3 rights suck so badly, how come the Pac 12, Big 12 and down the line are making money with it, and nobody is trying to do what Swofford did with ESPN and the ACC?
I dont' understand this stuff, and i'm not too familiar w/ the guys out west but on simple face value, and knowing alittle bit about three important guys in all of this.....Chuck Neinas, Jim Delaney and Swofford.....if Neinas and Delaney are doing the same thing with broadasting and college athletics, and it's different than Swofford, I'm inclined to lean toward whateve Neinas and Delaney are doing as a better way to be doing things.
In regards to Tier 3, Texas gets $15M from LHN and $9M for radio/internet and other media rights through IMG for a total of $24M
so learning all about our t3 rights has been great, great thread guys. based off this, is it possible that we passed on the acc and are holding out for a b12/b10 invite or are going to stay with the nbe becuase our t3 stuff is so good with sny putting out to so many?
so learning all about our t3 rights has been great, great thread guys. based off this, is it possible that we passed on the acc and are holding out for a b12/b10 invite or are going to stay with the nbe becuase our t3 stuff is so good with sny putting out to so many?
I don't understand the numbers in all of this or what any of it really means. But once again, from my perspective.
You've got a couple of power playres in all of this. Swofford, Delaney, Neinas, Slive, Scott...........They're all dealing with broadcasting arrangments in the billions of dollar range, for leagues of university athletic departments.
You look at the deals in place, and a simple thing jumps out at me.....which one of these things is not like the other?
And then - when you look at the track records of these guys, and what they've done, and learn a little bit about them - I still have yet to hear a single argument as to why what Swofford has done is better than what any of the others have done.......and there's pleny of reason, simply based on their histories, and experiences, to think that what the other four have done - is most likely a better way to be doing the business.
I disagree. I think our revenue situation around athletics is not compatible with the ACC. I think it's very real possibility that we stand lose money in the future if we join the ACC. I think the most important thing for uconn moving forward is freedom in our ability to schedule our sports as we see the best fit to reach our audience in primetime spots.
I don't see the ACC giving that to us.
What's out of line? I'll grant the ACC has the worst deal, but outside the PAc-12, they also have the worst football.
Acc gets 17 million per
Big 12 likely will get 20 million
Big 10 gets 20 million
Pac-12 gets 21 million
Sec gets 17 million (subject to renegotiation)
Where's this huge difference?
I don't know. I'm not claiming to understand this. I know one difference. 4 of 5 conferences have retained their own rights, to some broadcasting. 1 conference has not.
Again, on simple face value, I think that Delaney, Slive, Scott - and especially Neinas, are a hell of a lot more endowed when it comes to aptitude in dealing with sports broadcasting, than Swofford is. That's my opinion.
but that fact is that the ACC deal is significnatly different than 4 others. WHy is that? You tell me, you're the expert.
How's that? The ACC would give UConn $17 million per year. Uconn would keep their existing $8 million per year in multimedia rights and $4 million in uniform money. The only possible thing UConn would lose would be the $1 million Women's basketball contract. And its unclear it they'd even have to lose that.
You're talking about Tier 3 rights. Something that most schools get $1 million or less on. It's not this huge money maker people make it out to be.
That's not good enough. You're talking aobut billions of dollars here. Dozens of universities, major state universities. 4 deals are significantly different than 1. Why?
Because their rights aren't as valuable. If someone sells their BMW for more than your Tercel it doesn't always mean they are a better sales person than you, they had something more valuable to sell.
Commissioners aren't alchemists, they aren't turning lead into programming gold. You can measure the interest in these programs quite easily - in a shocking twist, the conferences with the most interest have gotten the highest paydays.
So I understand this....right now UConn's Tier III rights consist of the 8M IMG deal, the Nike deal, some women's bball broadcasting rights, perhaps some other small pieces, and then what the Big East owns/shares, which is the crappy football game and some crappy basketball games. I believe the chart that was linked before shows that latter value (which I believe reflects the SNY deal) at about 1.8M dollars.
Am I correct in understanding that the latter piece, the crappy broadcasting rights owned by the BE valued at approximately 1.8M, is the only thing we would EVER have to share with a conference? We keep everything else correct?
Well, if the numbers in that college sports business link are to be trusted, you're flat out wrong, because if I read it right, schools like North Carolina, Florida State, NC State....and others have multiple millions tied up in this tier 3 mystery, that they no longer have their own rights to control.
Well, if the numbers in that college sports business link are to be trusted, you're flat out wrong, because if I read it right, schools like North Carolina, Florida State, NC State....and others have multiple millions tied up in this tier 3 mystery, that they no longer have their own rights to control.
You are adding apple and oranges and saying they are all apples. They only give up the games, not the rest that is included. The games are virtually worthless beyond a few exceptions.
So are you saying that the ACC tier 3 is worthless? so much so that they don't give a about it and want ESPN to handle it?
Its pretty close to worthless and if they feel its in their best interest to include it how can you know they are wrong. You have no idea what the true facts are.
Youve just decided its different..... Therefore bad. The Big 12 is very different than the Pac 12 and Big 10, why aren't they wrong.
To me the Big 12 answer is clearly the worst - it gives Texas such a head start it's ridiculous - but I don't give a damn about the Big 12 so I don't lose much sleep over it.
With my admittedly limited understanding of this - numbers aren't my game......I just think that I'd rather UConn be the Texas of the Northeast, than Florida Sate of the south when it comes to these media situations and seems like UConn wouldn't have a chance to build something like Texas did down south, up here, if we were to agree to what the ACC has done. That's my understanding of all of this.
But then again, I've always kind of wondering whether or not you're really a UConn supporter, so I suppose it shouldn't be a surprise if you'd disagree with that.
I still see no reason to think that tying up all your media rights with a single company, a cable company no less, is better than what the others have done. I have plenty of reason to think that the business models for broadcasting that the other four conferences are using, with multiple levels of ownership of rights and multiple broadcasting partners is a better way to do it, and I fully admit that my reasoning is based entirely on my opinion of the quality of leadership in each conference.
When the one single company has a virtual monopoly on sports broadcasting (and has its own broadcast channel in ABC), it's not so bad. I agree that it might not be the best scenario, but I fail to see how it is inherently bad.
When the one single company has a virtual monopoly on sports broadcasting (and has its own broadcast channel in ABC), it's not so bad. I agree that it might not be the best scenario, but I fail to see how it is inherently bad.
Fair enough, we simply have different opinion on business, and I really don't have much to go on other than what I've stated, becuase numbers and things like all this tier 1, 2, 3 stuff is not anything that interests me. There's a saying about putting all your eggs in one basket - and I'll just add.....even if it's the biggest and nicest, and cushiest easter basket around.