CL82
NCAA Men’s Basketball National Champions - Again!
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no rivalry can match cash? i guess not if you're a prostitute.
Res ipsa loquitur.ehh................ let's show some class.
no rivalry can match cash? i guess not if you're a prostitute.
Res ipsa loquitur.ehh................ let's show some class.
The ACC’s contract with ESPN, which is valued at $155 million a year, contains a standard line called a “composition clause” that allows either the conference or ESPN to reopen the deal if membership increases or decreases by at least two schools. The conference or the network can act on that clause any time the conference’s membership changes by at least two schools.
Don't like that we aren't going with them.Don't blame SU for going. Don't like that it took everyone by surprise.
http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2011/09/26/Colleges/ACC.aspx
If you read that and do the math, that's approximately $15m per year, per school. That means updated practice facilities for all sports, updated game facilities for all sports and better pay to retain quality coaches. If that means we lose a game or two in NYC, so be it.
No rivalry can match that.
These things usually are a surprise. I think they tend to happen more in this fashion than the way Texas A&M did it. That is why the more news got out that UConn/Herbst was meeting/talking with other conferences, the clearer it became we weren't going anywhere in the short term.Don't blame SU for going. Don't like that it took everyone by surprise.
http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2011/09/26/Colleges/ACC.aspx
If you read that and do the math, that's approximately $15m per year, per school. That means updated practice facilities for all sports, updated game facilities for all sports and better pay to retain quality coaches. If that means we lose a game or two in NYC, so be it.
No rivalry can match that.
Do we have one these in our contract?
Many of us (at least posters on this board) were willing to be hoes for the imminent contract we supposedly were in line to get. I guess somehow it is more honorable if you are the one receiving the big paycheck than if it is someone else.We'll be hoes too if given the opportunity. I have my fingers crossed.
it's only sports is my thoughts exactly. they're hoping for get $15m/year, whereas we just turned down $11m/year. UConn just adopted a $1 billion annual budget (which by the way seems ridiculously high to me). i don't know what syracuse's will be, but to do all this for an extra $4 million/year? Cuse dropped their pants for pocket change. that's a cheap prostitute in my book.
Thats the correct question. If BE had this clause why $@k didn't we expand by 2 a couple years ago. The year when WVU almost played for the NC game (Pitt beat them and ruined their undefeated season), is when the BE had some street cred.
If we had that clause and did not expand then we are really stupid.
. After you factor in health insurance, police, buildings, etc., the general budget that may be fungible is closer to $100-150 million. That's why when the state cuts $30 billion, it hurts badly, and why a school losing $20 million on sports is bleeding. It's not chump change. That's a huge amount of money.
This has been your operating theory for a long time. Can you show me one article anywhere that deals with Comcast wanting the BE? If this were the case, why would teams walk away from this bonanza? Maybe they had better insight about TV contracts and what was going to happen than you do. More importantly, maybe they knew that the BB only schools were not willing to walk away from ESPN to go on a third rate cable channel for regular season and conference games. The BB's have an agenda too and you can bet that ND supported them and would do almost anything to keep NBC as their own network for FB.F Syracuse and Pitt. The Big East had a huge payday coming from Comcast and Syracuse and Pitt screwed it up from everyone. Don't come here looking for support.
to be honest i think any school losing $20 million/year in athletics should shut their program down. i think it's ridiculous for a school to spend so much money on their athletics that they lose more than 10-20% of their general budget on athletics. if a school loses that much money on an extra curricular activity it needs to rethink it's priorities and scale back. but we're not talking about $20 million, we're talking about $4 million and it seems to me that much of that would be eaten up with the higher travel costs. that doesn't even take into account that our next contract would have likely been for quite a bit more than the $11 m we turned down. schools make decisions like this for money, but at the end of the day the money's not that great, and half the times it's still a losing investment, so what's the point really?
What $4 million? The next contract isn't coming anywhere near $11 million. If the ACC is going to $18 million (the ACC averages $13 million now) you can bet the next BE contract will be closer to $8 million. UConn suddenly jumps into the black by moving into the ACC, and this is just the beginning as the 64 will start soaking up money all around once constituted.
we were offered $11 million by ESPN earlier this year. we turned it down b/c we were in line to make more than that when we renegotiate. sure, we won't get that now, but if they stayed put in the Big East it was predicted we'd be getting $15 million or more. at the very least we'd have gotten more than $11 m. we were willing to continue at $8m or whatever we're getting now for two more years so you have to assume we expected to get a big enough increase to forego an extra $3m/year now. most reasonable assumptions were $15m or so. all of that's out the window now, but those are the numbers you have to look at to determine if it makes financial sense for Cuse to move from BE to ACC. our $15m versus the ACCs $18 m. and you have to keep in mind they have to pay us $5 m up front. after factoring in additional travel costs they moved for peanuts.
we were offered $11 million by ESPN earlier this year. we turned it down b/c we were in line to make more than that when we renegotiate. sure, we won't get that now, but if they stayed put in the Big East it was predicted we'd be getting $15 million or more. at the very least we'd have gotten more than $11 m. we were willing to continue at $8m or whatever we're getting now for two more years so you have to assume we expected to get a big enough increase to forego an extra $3m/year now. most reasonable assumptions were $15m or so. all of that's out the window now, but those are the numbers you have to look at to determine if it makes financial sense for Cuse to move from BE to ACC. our $15m versus the ACCs $18 m. and you have to keep in mind they have to pay us $5 m up front. after factoring in additional travel costs they moved for peanuts.
What $4 million? The next contract isn't coming anywhere near $11 million. If the ACC is going to $18 million (the ACC averages $13 million now) you can bet the next BE contract will be closer to $8 million. UConn suddenly jumps into the black by moving into the ACC, and this is just the beginning as the 64 will start soaking up money all around once constituted.
I am skeptical about the ACC really going to $18 million. If that is the case, than ESPN committed to about an incremental $100 million a year for the next 10 years just to destroy the Big East? That seems a little silly. The Big East isn't that much of a threat that ESPN would pay another league a billion dollars to take us out, and not even really take us out. And if they are going to $18, then it indicates the market is still very strong and Comcast may get desperate and pay up.
I am skeptical about the ACC really going to $18 million. If that is the case, than ESPN committed to about an incremental $100 million a year for the next 10 years just to destroy the Big East? That seems a little silly. The Big East isn't that much of a threat that ESPN would pay another league a billion dollars to take us out, and not even really take us out. And if they are going to $18, then it indicates the market is still very strong and Comcast may get desperate and pay up.