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Academically, they’re a great fit. Better than most of who we have, really
Academically, they’re a great fit. Better than most of who we have, really
Well, it hasn't happened yet. Note that the purpose of the calls, is "early exploratory discussions." Could very likely come to nothing, especially if ESPN can't pony up more cash...So much for the "ACC didn't want them" or there's no money to make it happen talk.
Well, it hasn't happened yet. Note that the purpose of the calls, is "early exploratory discussions." Could very likely come to nothing, especially if ESPN can't pony up more cash...
“Vet and have early exploratory discussions on potential...”So much for the "ACC didn't want them" or there's no money to make it happen talk.
I'm more curious about how it will affect the GOR. I doubt half the ACC members agree to add those schools if the league doesn't reduce the GOR schedule or if those two teams don't add positive value for yearly media payouts.
“Vet and have early exploratory discussions on potential...”
Hard to work anymore caveats and qualifiers into that. Lack of money and interest may still be true.
The GOR just says new members have to sign it. Not sure there is anything more to that. What might be interesting is getting them the votes. There may be a member school or three that will hold their approval hostage
... don't forget the not football teams ...The BIG 12 has teams in Texas, Utah, Arizona, and Colorado. They would probably split their conference into regions and only have to travel that far once or twice a year.
I actually did some mapping, Oregon/Washington going to Wisconsin or Illinois or Michigan or Ohio isn't much different than BC/Syracuse going to Miami. Given the improvement in flight, yes it's a long flight, but it's not unsurmountable.
I agree that the ACC didn’t do anything wrong. At the same time, the big change is the PAC-12 implosion showed how quickly things can change. And the ACC is at risk of things changing.I think it is extremely unlikely the ACC can add anyone right now (other than ND), that would increase the current share values.
If something comes out of these talks with Stanford and Cal (and i'm not convinced of it at all), i'm expecting they would get either a current share (if ESPN is willing to pony up for that), or less than a current share (if that is all ESPN is willing to offer up) and Stanford and Cal are ok with less than full shares.
And while I understand why fans (and some schools) are complaining about falling behind, I think there are very few (and possibly no) schools that would get a full share in the SEC or B1G right now. I expect that any school that wanted to jump to either of the Big 2 is unlikely to get more money - at least until the next contract negotiations than they currently get in the ACC.
The environment has changed and most fans are still thinking in terms of the old environment, not the new one. Fans and schools can complain about falling behind, but jumping may not make it better. They may simply end up in a situation where they end up in a conference where they are making the same money they make now and now have to play 8-9 games per year against schools that are making alot more than them in a media deal (and that doesn't even include the huge sums of money they would have to pay to extricate themselves from their current arrangement).
It was well reported that the ACC looked into expanding with PAC teams but the money did not work (and that was in a better environment then we are now in). The idea of partial shares was not an option for those schools until they saw the media contract last week. Until that happened none of them would have moved to another conference without a full share. That has changed because the market has changed.
I don't think the ACC did anything wrong. Actually I think they did exactly what was correct financially. Schools were not going to sign up for adding more schools if it diluted their share.
Sources cautioned that the two scheduled discussions are in the embryonic stages -- one call slated with the ACC athletic directors and a separate call with the league's presidents that will play out on Monday and Tuesday.
There will be headwinds to a move for Cal and Stanford to the ACC, as sources on Monday cautioned about the complexities involved.
"It's complicated," an ACC source said. "There's a significant travel expense. I think it's going to be all over the board with both the ADs and the presidents in what they may want to do. [Cal and Stanford] would likely have to take a reduced share. Eventually, though, they're going to want to become a full share."
The potential additions of Cal and Stanford do not project to be financial game-changers, per sources. And while the addition of the academic prestige of schools like Cal and Stanford would certainly excite some ACC presidents, the fiscal upside appears limited.
"There's no windfall for the current members," the ACC source said, indicating that it's hard to envision any scenarios where it would be significantly additive for the current schools.
So much for the "ACC didn't want them" or there's no money to make it happen talk.