RonJohn
Helluva Engineer
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My biggest issue with your analysis is that you are taking today's situation and projecting it to be exactly the same way in 7-13 years with the exception that the GOR has expired or is closer to expiring. The situation could be drastically different. For example, you believe that the Big12 is going to get an excellent TV contract when their new one expires. I am not so sure about that. What teams did they add that really move the needle? AZ, ASU, Utah, BYU? Which one of those is the giant that will make their contract go way up? Will TV broadcasters actually have money to raise their contracts, or will the cord-cutting finally restrict sports spending? You seem certain that the Big12 will eclipse the ACC in the next contract. They are behind the ACC in their current contract which just started, seven years after the ACC contract started.If you look at the viewership chart, the top 4 ACC teams are (in order of most average viewers):
1. FSU
2. Clemson
3. Miami
4. Louisville
Let's look at the pattern of what's happened to this point that's changed the landscape.
1. Texas and OU going to the SEC
2. USC and UCLA going to the B1G
It's well known that the B1G covets FSU and/or Miami for the exploding Florida market. Clemson is also an expansion target. Anyone here have any faith that the ACC will keep the top 3 members of the ACC in terms of viewership? What happened when the PAC12 and BIG12 lost their respective "biggest brands"? The PAC12 is all but dead with all 4 members remaining, and two are openly talking to other conferences. The Big12 had to take a reduced media payout, but they were smart enough to add some nice pieces in terms of markets and programs with upside. Their bigger paydays will come on the next contract.
So what happens to the ACC when (there's no "ifs" here) FSU, Clemson, and Miami all bolt? There are ZERO programs left on the national landscape that can back fill the viewership that the ACC will lose when those programs bolt. If anyone doesn't think they'll bolt when the Death Star B1G or SEC comes knocking with their $100 million+ annual payout, well those programs are much smarter than GT leadership back in 2012/2013. It's likely UNC is gone as well as they've been holding off the B1G and SEC for decades...but when the media distribution shrinks in 2036 because our most watched members will want to join the club of the "haves", UNC won't be able to hold out any longer if they want to sustain their "blueblood" status. ACC won't be able to command the dollars that the Big12/SEC/B1G command, and the ACC most likely loses Louisville/VT/NC State/Syracuse/possibly GT to the Big12 because the ACC media value will crater without the "brand" ACC programs.
IMO, the ACC's last chance at viability would have been working something out with the remaining PAC12 members years ago. Trying to fill in the geographical gap with a Texas school like UHouston or Baylor would have been a good move. The PAC 12 schools remaining after USC and UCLA bolted REALLY REALLY tried to stick together, and that was the ACC's chance to capitalize. Unfortunately, ACC shuffled about until most of the remaining PAC12 schools found other homes.
I grew up watching GT in the ACC. I was born well after GT left the SEC so I have no recollection of any of the SEC battles GT had. The ACC is all I've known in terms of GT fandom. You're right, it is VERY sad what's going on. However, that's the nature of business. You either adjust, or die. GT stayed in the ACC for sentimental reasons in 2012/2013, and we may have sealed our fate at that time.
**Something else I touched on earlier in this thread that's interesting to ponder. Would the ACC have survived had GT moved to the B1G in 2012? Atlanta's media market carriage fees probably formed a big part of the ACC's valuation at the time. Had GT moved to the B1G, would that have precipitated other schools to move as well given the ACC no longer could have capitalized on carriage fees of Atlanta and GT? Interesting how GT is central to the ACC's future in one shape or another.
I am not so sure that the Big10 wants FSU at the moment. If they want to have a Florida school it would probably be UF or Miami. Why? They probably can't pull UF out of the SEC, but they could get Miami, which is in a bigger city and is already an AAU school. People believe that the Big10 won't care about AAU in the future, but even if they reduce the importance in comparing Miami and FSU you get similar brands, both in the state of Florida for markets/recruiting/etc, but one of them has AAU status. If both are similar in other regards, that would likely push Miami as the choice. I don't think the SEC would be very eager to get FSU either. I am certain that UF wouldn't want them. The SEC is already limited to the Southeast. Future expansion will probably be centered on expanding their region instead of simply add more teams. UNC and Virginia are the two most pundants discuss being wanted by either and even both of the Big10 and SEC.
The thing that would be best for the ACC is if: Clemson keeps playing well, FSU starts playing like FSU of the 90s, Miami starts playing like Miami of the 80s and early 2000s, GT goes on a streak of 10 plus win season, another few teams start playing well. If 5 different teams from the ACC win the CFP in the next 7 years, the conversation will be completely different. It is pretty certain that nothing is happening within the next few years. Every team needs to be working their butts off to make the future bright for themselves primarily, but if every team does that then the conference will be in very good shape.