GoJacketsInRaleigh
Ramblin' Wreck
- Messages
- 999
I think we should merge into one 64 team conference with 8 team divisions. It will look like 1990 again!I would guess there will be divisions within the conferences where everyone plays each other.
I think we should merge into one 64 team conference with 8 team divisions. It will look like 1990 again!I would guess there will be divisions within the conferences where everyone plays each other.
Hey at least we have athletes with good grades tho right ?I agree miss the old days , the way things are going I really don't think in a couple of years I will give a rat's backend about college football.
Guess we shouldn't have pissed off the SEC and said No to the Big 10 a few years ago. To be a school the has so many smart people we really do some dumb Sh*t.
It’s bad when you’re one of the last kids on the playground picked for kickball but it may be worse when all the big kids go to another playground and leave the little kids behind. It seems like the latter is happening now.
That’s a good list you put together.
I'm not sure I agree. That still feels like long term thinking we havent gotten to yet. The Big 10 is negotiating a 1 billion dollar plus a year package right now, primarily with Fox. I don't think that streaming is a major player in that deal.It’s been mentioned by others, but there are no “local TV markets” any more. Streaming and national services like ESPN matter much more.
The “Atlanta market” is not a factor. It was 20 years ago.
Eyeballs matter, but the fact a team is located anywhere doesn’t.
It’s been mentioned by others, but there are no “local TV markets” any more. Streaming and national services like ESPN matter much more.
The “Atlanta market” is not a factor. It was 20 years ago.
Eyeballs matter, but the fact a team is located anywhere doesn’t.
As long as there are blackouts in tv contracts, there are local markets.It’s been mentioned by others, but there are no “local TV markets” any more. Streaming and national services like ESPN matter much more.
The “Atlanta market” is not a factor. It was 20 years ago.
Eyeballs matter, but the fact a team is located anywhere doesn’t.
This article makes me think you’re right and it helped me understand GoR a little better.I think that the money is getting so large that the GOR will not really stop the dissolution of the ACC within a very few years
But the rights are where the money comes from. That's like saying "the TV money is getting so big that the fact that we gave all the power and legal rights over our TV money to the ACC will start to matter less".I think that the money is getting so large that the GOR will not really stop the dissolution of the ACC within a very few years
Nobody's going anywhere for a while, and that may very well turn out to be a good thing for us.To take an opposite side of the argument for a moment, lets assume the GOR is really solid and teams cannot take their TV revenue, whatever the source, with them if they leave. The conference today looks pretty good. It would be nice if ND joined as a full member, but there are lots of schools that would join as full members if the ACC remains intact. WVU and UCF would leap at a chance to join.
As time goes on the GOR will be less and less of a tether, but we're still 14 years away from 2036. Check back in ~10 years, give or take.This article makes me think you’re right and it helped me understand GoR a little better.
Clemson football: Why ACC Grant of Rights might not mean as much as we think
The Clemson football program would have a major hurdle to overcome if it were to ever want to leave the ACC: The conference's Grant of Rights agreement.rubbingtherock.com
I find it very difficult to believe that the ACC will look like it does now in 2036. I’m really wondering if it will even exist.As time goes on the GOR will be less and less of a tether, but we're still 14 years away from 2036. Check back in 10 years.
This article makes me think you’re right and it helped me understand GoR a little better.
Clemson football: Why ACC Grant of Rights might not mean as much as we think
The Clemson football program would have a major hurdle to overcome if it were to ever want to leave the ACC: The conference's Grant of Rights agreement.rubbingtherock.com
The problem with the GOR is that if FSU and Miami and Clemson "leave", they don't really leave. Their rights stay with the conference. All their home TV appearances stay with the conference. The ACC still holds all the rights. They have the cards. ESPN has the money; that's their cards. Clemson has nothing; no cards for FSU or Miami or UNC.If Clemson and Florida State both elected to leave the ACC, complete turmoil would break out within the conference. Because of the loss of two schools, ESPN would have every right to renegotiate its contractual agreement with the ACC and could, in some respects, leave the conference for dead.
The one thing we have to remember in these hypothetical renegotiations is that ESPN would hold all the cards and the ACC would have almost nothing. The conference has nearly no negotiating power when its two biggest brands are gone.
I doubt it will last until 2036, but the GOR extending until then means it won't implode before 2030 at the earliest. Even in 2030 there's still 6 more years of GOR left.I find it very difficult to believe that the ACC will look like it does now in 2036. I’m really wondering if it will even exist.