I don't see the voting rights pleading the same as an executive that is going to be fired. I see it as the ACC saying that FSU is disrupting and harming the rest of the conference at the moment, and asking for their authority in the conference to be restricted until this case is decided. (or FSU stops the damaging activities, such as releasing confidential information)
I am not a lawyer, but my impression is that things look much worse in written pleadings than they actually are. I had a family member in a criminal case, misdemeanor driving offense that ended up being plead to a civil driving offense. His lawyer warned him that when he submitted his filings to the court to not get overly concerned. He said that some people freak out when they read that their lawyer is making "demands" of the prosecution, but it is just language that is used in court to get discovery. In this case, I don't think all of the filings are as "ugly" as you seem to believe. It is normal court language and normal legal writing. The FSU filing seemed "petty" to me because it wasn't very well constructed to guide someone through their points. It was written more like a political speech or a fan board. They put a lot of talking points in the filing, but they didn't tie everything together and make strong arguments that there was a cause of action, nor what the remedy should be if a cause of action were found. In my opinion, it was written in such a way as to make their fans hoot and hollar, but not to get a court to side with them.
Right...one party (FSU) accusing another party (ACC) of basically mismanagement and dereliction of fiduciary duty. One party (ACC) then asks the court to basically neuter one of its own members (FSU).
Whether it's just meat for their fanbase (BTW, FSU is about to spend a LOT of money for lawyers to throw out that meat to the FSU fans) while the ACC is going to spend a LOT of money trying to intercept that meat. All the while, other conference leadership, teams from other conferences, and fans around the country are laughing at all the dirty laundry being thrown in the front yard.
You can argue that FSU has no case, and I agree with you there, and it's all for show...but it's still damaging to the ACC and its members nonetheless. Did anyone even know about the ACC's and ESPN's contract option in 2025 until FSU brought it up? You don't think that's beneficial to other conferences from a strategic standpoint?
Sorry, when the ACC is basically openly asking the court to neuter one of its members, that's pretty ugly...and this is just the opening salvo. As I said, gloves are coming off.
Yup, nothing ugly about any of this at all...