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My neighbor told me this morning the AA at UNC has been full bore with game week and the aftermath from the shooting. No news on the vote.
U can t get eagles to flock.I don't see a world in which ND comes to the ACC, but I do wonder if we could coax another annual game out of them as part of the scheduling agreement. That's strong inventory for the ACC.
It could be Stanford in years where they play in Palo Alto and another team in years where the game is in South Bend.
Clemson does play south Carolina every year just like we play UGA.U can t get eagles to flock.
I like you way of describing how we start w flexibility in schedule. Maybe add Navy ( ND football was about to go out of business in WW2, but navy was generous and played them). i would love to see navy army get some "acc schdeule flexibility" verses FCS or G5 instead of teams no one has ever hesrd of. ( Went to last years Army Navy - freezing cold but totally packed - loser made one mistake) .
Acc could let some other programs that have earned top billing -have schedule flexibility byto drop an acc game and prompt a rival - say clemson drops gt and plays south carolina. Then every ones happy!
Acc needs to demonstrate to TV folks that we are flexible about getting quality games on tv.
ND is contractually obligated to play five ACC games per year. Home or away, still obligated to play five games. If Stanford joins, that should at least bump up to six so that the rest of the ACC doesn't lose a game. Whether the Stanford game is in Indiana or California, ND should still play five other ACC teams in my opinion.I don't see a world in which ND comes to the ACC, but I do wonder if we could coax another annual game out of them as part of the scheduling agreement. That's strong inventory for the ACC.
It could be Stanford in years where they play in Palo Alto and another team in years where the game is in South Bend.
Agreed, I'm saying they should bump it to 6 to give the ACC a larger inventory of big games against ND, particularly since they are the ones pushing the ACC to add.ND is contractually obligated to play five ACC games per year. Home or away, still obligated to play five games. If Stanford joins, that should at least bump up to six so that the rest of the ACC doesn't lose a game. Whether the Stanford game is in Indiana or California, ND should still play five other ACC teams in my opinion.
I’d rather an ACC team provide that dose of reality. I hope we’re the guys to do it, too!ND needs to play FSU and Clemson every year until they either join or get out. One of the 3 is odd man out in the playoff. FSU needs a dose of reality that they don't run the ACC .
The value of the ACC Network is estimated to be around $268 million per year and based on the assumption that there are roughly 29 million cable and satellite subscribers in the nine ACC states, and that the network could get $1 a month from each of them.ND needs to play FSU and Clemson every year until they either join or get out. One of the 3 is odd man out in the playoff. FSU needs a dose of reality that they don't run the ACC .
I guess I'm missing something, but doesn't 29 million x $1/month x 12 months = 348 million dollars per year? What happened to the other $80 million?The value of the ACC Network is estimated to be around $268 million per year and based on the assumption that there are roughly 29 million cable and satellite subscribers in the nine ACC states, and that the network could get $1 a month from each of them.
The ACCN is a distributor of content. So do a net present value calculation and let FSU or Clemson determine how much of a share they want to buy and let them buy it.
Operating costs are about $100 million. Outkick estimates it as 29 million subs and $1 each. Others value is slightly more in subs but a lower earn rate. Call it between $250M and $300M depending on who is doing the math.I guess I'm missing something, but doesn't 29 million x $1/month x 12 months = 348 million dollars per year? What happened to the other $80 million?
Tangential thought line. If we pick up another committed ACC game from ND, how does that fit in with their negotiations for their own potential TV deal? Would that only leave 6 games that aren't ACC content games to broadcast? There comes a point where it's more profitable to be on the ACC contract. I'm just not sure where the numbers will land that dictate the outcome.ND is contractually obligated to play five ACC games per year. Home or away, still obligated to play five games. If Stanford joins, that should at least bump up to six so that the rest of the ACC doesn't lose a game. Whether the Stanford game is in Indiana or California, ND should still play five other ACC teams in my opinion.
The games at ND are broadcast under the ND contract with NBC. The games that ND plays at ACC teams is broadcast by ESPN under the ACC contract. Playing more games against ACC teams wouldn't change the broadcast contracts for either ND or the ACC teams. It would make the ACC slate of games more attractive, and would provide more ticket money for ACC teams.Tangential thought line. If we pick up another committed ACC game from ND, how does that fit in with their negotiations for their own potential TV deal? Would that only leave 6 games that aren't ACC content games to broadcast? There comes a point where it's more profitable to be on the ACC contract. I'm just not sure where the numbers will land that dictate the outcome.
Investing in shares? Interesting....The one pitfall to that is the additional investment would come with a demand of additional influence. 15 equal votes would have to be split into shares so the higher investors have greater influence.Operating costs are about $100 million. Outkick estimates it as 29 million subs and $1 each. Others value is slightly more in subs but a lower earn rate. Call it between $250M and $300M depending on who is doing the math.
Point is the same though. If FSU wants more, let them buy more. Up front.
I'm sort of in between these two.My take on this is that Stanford is already a regular ND opponent, so including them as the 6th opponent in a 6-game requirement is a gift to ND. They get something without giving up anything. My preference is to stipulate that Stanford cannot count as the 6th game until after 2036, and that ND needs to add a 6th ACC game beginning in 2024.
Tony Latimore on how the talent levels stack up for the potential newcomers.
Keep in mind when I look at things like this I don't assume because 1 program is like a couple of points higher than another that they are more talented. I tend to think in terms of talent equivalency. Are schools basically in ranges where you can say their talent is pretty similar. From a GT perspective there are some ACC schools that clearly have more overall talent (Clemson, FSU, Miami, UNC), there are some that have less talent (BC, Duke, Syr, Wake, UVA, VT) and then there are some that are in the same general level of talent (Pitt, L'ville, NCST).
It looks like SMU and Stanford would have similar talent levels to GT and frankly I see them as having similar ceilings to GT. Cal in a little lower. I'd expect SMU to be competitive in the ACC from day 1. Stanford is rebuilding but has been successful in the past (sound familiar) and Cal is generally a lesser FB program.