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It was the board of governors, not the legislature.The expert in this video seems to ignor the fact the NC legislature has joined UNC and NCST at the hip. I believe one cannot leave without the other.
It was the board of governors, not the legislature.The expert in this video seems to ignor the fact the NC legislature has joined UNC and NCST at the hip. I believe one cannot leave without the other.
What the BOG said was no NC University system school could switch conferences without the approval of the BOG. It is assumed they meant UNC had to bring NCSU along if they found a home outside the conference but that is not explicit. I have had a bunch of conversations about this with local UNC grads. One is my next door neighbor who is close with the AA in Chapel Hill. All of them say staying in the ACC is what they want and they are hearing from the UNC admin that is what the school wants as well.This looks diffeerent to me, don't think I would do that if I were state of NC, they could leave both just sitting there with no place to go, don't have to have them, yes I'm sure they might like one of them.
What is happening tonight and tomorrow night?What the BOG said was no NC University system school could switch conferences without the approval of the BOG. It is assumed they meant UNC had to bring NCSU along if they found a home outside the conference but that is not explicit. I have had a bunch of conversations about this with local UNC grads. One is my next door neighbor who is close with the AA in Chapel Hill. All of them say staying in the ACC is what they want and they are hearing from the UNC admin that is what the school wants as well.
One thing is certain, neither UNC or NCSU is leaving without their TV rights and neither can buy the rights back.
BTW, I was in Raleigh today and the city is closing down Hillsborough St tonight and tomorrow night for a free watch party. I kinda wish my business in the Triangle had not ended this morning. That would be fun out there pulling for the ACC.
I assume this is sarcasm, but the NCSU faithful would argue that their men's and women's basketball teams are playing in the Final Four. Hillsborough St is the main drag for the NC State campus. The women are playing tonight and the men are playing tomorrow night. The City of Raleigh essentially saying, "We're proud of these two teams and want the citizens of Raleigh to be able to join hands in honoring them."What is happening tonight and tomorrow night?
Ncst fans are getting a lot of credit for sticking with thier teams during lean years.I assume this is sarcasm, but the NCSU faithful would argue that their men's and women's basketball teams are playing in the Final Four. Hillsborough St is the main drag for the NC State campus. The women are playing tonight and the men are playing tomorrow night. The City of Raleigh essentially saying, "We're proud of these two teams and want the citizens of Raleigh to be able to join hands in honoring them."
This is a dream scenario I would love to see duplicated along Techwood.
Not sarcasm, I could care less about BB mens or womens. I lived in AR when Eddie Sutton was the coach and knew Eddie a little and he taught the AR fans about BB and it was at that time that Bobby Cremins was the GT coach and I would get them on TV some and I tried to become a fan and did a little. I always thought Bobby was a unique sort of guy and he had some good players, seemed to only like to play a 6 man rotation sort of game. I moved back to Atl in '99 and an old frat brother had GTBB tickets and I got into it a little the year they made the NCAA finals and that is about it for me. I did go to the ACC BB Tournament one year when it was the Georgia Dome right after I moved back to Atl., did enjoy the experience but would have something else to do if i had been asked again. Just not a game that has ever really grabbed my interest. Tried playing it when in HS and practiced with the team all the way through my senior year and we had players that ended up on schollie at LSU, Auburn, 2 at KY and a couple at Davidson if I remember correctly. They did dress me out for some home games my SR. year because I had been out there banging it around in practice with those guys for about 3 years. That is the extent of my interest in the game. My sports were FB and track. HS BB helped me some with those two sports. I have for a long time thought the overall best athletes were BB players, seem to need great hand eye coordination, athletic, great endurance, toughness. The outcomes always seemed to be so controlled by the referees and so much time spent at the foul line, used to watch teams outside NC play the NC teams and so many times it seemed the referees determined the outcomes, all a real turnoff for me. Saw some of that in FB before replay but nothing like I noticed in BB.I assume this is sarcasm, but the NCSU faithful would argue that their men's and women's basketball teams are playing in the Final Four. Hillsborough St is the main drag for the NC State campus. The women are playing tonight and the men are playing tomorrow night. The City of Raleigh essentially saying, "We're proud of these two teams and want the citizens of Raleigh to be able to join hands in honoring them."
This is a dream scenario I would love to see duplicated along Techwood.
What the BOG said was no NC University system school could switch conferences without the approval of the BOG. It is assumed they meant UNC had to bring NCSU along if they found a home outside the conference but that is not explicit. I have had a bunch of conversations about this with local UNC grads. One is my next door neighbor who is close with the AA in Chapel Hill. All of them say staying in the ACC is what they want and they are hearing from the UNC admin that is what the school wants as well.
One thing is certain, neither UNC or NCSU is leaving without their TV rights and neither can buy the rights back.
BTW, I was in Raleigh today and the city is closing down Hillsborough St tonight and tomorrow night for a free watch party. I kinda wish my business in the Triangle had not ended this morning. That would be fun out there pulling for the ACC.
isn't that the ivy league now? Not picking on you. That sounds like a terrible idea. The athletic budget would crumble and impossible to pay off our existing debt.I think all the schools with a history and aspiration for academic and athletic success/prestige should form their own conference. GT, Stanford, ND….etc…. Most schools say they do, but not really. It’s really hard to be at the very top of both.
The Ivies don't give athletic scholarships either.isn't that the ivy league now? Not picking on you. That sounds like a terrible idea. The athletic budget would crumble and impossible to pay off our existing debt.
Plus a true college has many sports teams, not just football. We would basically be intramurals with $100M in debt for no reason.
Really really bad idea
If I wanted to be another Ivy League, I would just say join the Ivy League. Harvard and Yale and the boys don’t want to be a national champion at the highest level. They don’t compete against power five teams, Notre Dame and Stanford do. And we can still play outside the league.isn't that the ivy league now? Not picking on you. That sounds like a terrible idea. The athletic budget would crumble and impossible to pay off our existing debt.
Plus a true college has many sports teams, not just football. We would basically be intramurals with $100M in debt for no reason.
Really really bad idea
I think that was the ACC before we tried to be “competitive.”isn't that the ivy league now? Not picking on you. That sounds like a terrible idea. The athletic budget would crumble and impossible to pay off our existing debt.
Plus a true college has many sports teams, not just football. We would basically be intramurals with $100M in debt for no reason.
Really really bad idea
We’re not a fit for the current Ivy, but I’ve read about “Southern Ivy” ideas for years. If we continue to be dramatically out spent on NIL (yes I understand the displeasure with it, but iiwii) we might eventually end up with an elite group of schools outside the P2 equally unwilling to run a pro football team. Who knows, that’s sort of where the ACC is maybe going sans Clemson and FSU. Or maybe we get one more shot at B1G.If I wanted to be another Ivy League, I would just say join the Ivy League. Harvard and Yale and the boys don’t want to be a national champion at the highest level. They don’t compete against power five teams, Notre Dame and Stanford do. And we can still play outside the league.
I guess I should’ve said conference instead of league. Actually, I just checked, I did say conference.
imo, we either go big our go home.We’re not a fit for the current Ivy, but I’ve read about “Southern Ivy” ideas for years. If we continue to be dramatically out spent on NIL (yes I understand the displeasure with it, but iiwii) we might eventually end up with an elite group of schools outside the P2 equally unwilling to run a pro football team. Who knows, that’s sort of where the ACC is maybe going sans Clemson and FSU. Or maybe we get one more shot at B1G.
I’ve wondered if there is an affluent bunch of younger alums, crazy about football and ready to step up. I’m older, well in the loop with academic contributions, not as much AA (but I do contribute).
Completely agree. The romantic thoughts of the student athlete has passed. Either run with the big dogs or stay on the f'in porchimo, we either go big our go home.
I am all in as long as we aim high.
Doubtful. While there are perhaps, a few thousand donors to A-T, only about 10 (yes, t-e-n) really move the needle. Even TStan, when asked, said he had no plans to increase "fund-raising" because he could simply call 10 or so donors and get what he needed. I did a study on it a few years ago and he wasn't wrong. (That's why when CPJ needed a new locker room, he simply called one donor and asked and got $6 million to do so.)I just can’t tell if alums are ready to pony up enough to get off the porch. Reactions on here to NIL tell me it might have to come from some new generation of donors, mostly folks I’m too old to know well. Hey I’m wrong at least once/day so who knows.
I don't believe the current chaotic situation is sustainable for much longer. College sports don't really have much meaning if the players are not students working toward a meaningful degree.Doubtful. While there are perhaps, a few thousand donors to A-T, only about 10 (yes, t-e-n) really move the needle. Even TStan, when asked, said he had no plans to increase "fund-raising" because he could simply call 10 or so donors and get what he needed. I did a study on it a few years ago and he wasn't wrong. (That's why when CPJ needed a new locker room, he simply called one donor and asked and got $6 million to do so.)
Schools like Oregon, Tennessee, Texas A&M, etc have donors who write $100 million dollar checks to the football program. Tech has generous alumni and we do well for our size, but nowhere near what some of these schools can do. This doesn't happen in basketball because it doesn't take much to run a top-notch basketball program.
Having said all of that, I think the smart thing to do is to re-organize college athletics into tiers based on resources (e.g., enrollment, fanbase, budget, etc) much like high schools do. But they probably won't. In that case, should the ACC survive the FSU/Clemson lawsuits, they may very well evolve into a smarter version of the Ivy League ... still D1, attractive to media partners, but not a dominant football conference. (Typical business evolution ... Nrs 1 and 2 dominate, 3 muddles along, there's a shakeout for all of the rest.)
It's interesting to watch ...
Isn't it already organized this way? P5(4)/G5/D1/D2/D3, FBS/FCS, etc. What's happening now is a movement toward splitting up the highest tier (again).Doubtful. While there are perhaps, a few thousand donors to A-T, only about 10 (yes, t-e-n) really move the needle. Even TStan, when asked, said he had no plans to increase "fund-raising" because he could simply call 10 or so donors and get what he needed. I did a study on it a few years ago and he wasn't wrong. (That's why when CPJ needed a new locker room, he simply called one donor and asked and got $6 million to do so.)
Schools like Oregon, Tennessee, Texas A&M, etc have donors who write $100 million dollar checks to the football program. Tech has generous alumni and we do well for our size, but nowhere near what some of these schools can do. This doesn't happen in basketball because it doesn't take much to run a top-notch basketball program.
Having said all of that, I think the smart thing to do is to re-organize college athletics into tiers based on resources (e.g., enrollment, fanbase, budget, etc) much like high schools do. But they probably won't. In that case, should the ACC survive the FSU/Clemson lawsuits, they may very well evolve into a smarter version of the Ivy League ... still D1, attractive to media partners, but not a dominant football conference. (Typical business evolution ... Nrs 1 and 2 dominate, 3 muddles along, there's a shakeout for all of the rest.)
It's interesting to watch ...