- Messages
- 11,491
I think most people agree on this…
But the fact that we are splitting hairs over this only confirms my suspicion that the ACC has been historically bad at hyping its conference compared to other conferences.
I think most people agree on this…
But the fact that we are splitting hairs over this only confirms my suspicion that the ACC has been historically bad at hyping its conference compared to other conferences.
The B1G didn’t want Cal, apparently, though, which is a thing that makes you worry a bit based on those same graphs. Almost double the research dollars of GT and the SF/SJ media market, which is also quite large. Maybe they don’t think they would turn it around in football.
The discussion of GT and B1G reminds me of the saying about conference expansion: Fans pick their favorite schools, school presidents pick conference members. School presidents have totally different requirements for conference memberships than fans.
B1G school presidents invited GT to join a decade ago (from 2010-2012). Not much has changed since then. If anything, there are factors that have moved even more in GT's favor.
GT is still the same athletic program, but with better leadership. Football, we're still a 7ish win team with special seasons of 10+ wins every 4-5 years. Basketball is still the same program that's still trying find our glory years of the 90's and early 2000's. Both programs are now looking at far brighter days than what's been going on the last few seasons.
B1G wants to be in the South. Period. The Southeast is quickly becoming an economic powerhouse for the US. Which means the population is shifting to this area. Atlanta has the biggest concentration of B1G alumni in the South, and that has grown even more since 2012. Think about that when you talk about carriage fees and subscribers to the B1G network. Oh, did anyone mention that Atlanta is the biggest media market in the South? The value of the ACC media contract would plummet without GT and Atlanta. The ACC knew that and talked our shortsighted President out of leaving the ACC (seriously, read the AJC interview with former President Peterson...it will make your blood boil). Since 2012, the Atlanta media market has grown, economic value has grown, population has grown. All of which made GT attractive in 2012 has gotten even stronger in 2023, and will continue to get stronger over the next few decades.
You think Media networks think about that?
The big city winners and losers of the Fortune 500: Why Houston, Atlanta and Dallas are (almost) beating New York and Chicago
New York and Chicago have each declined more than 70% since the early days of the Fortune 500.finance.yahoo.com
From an athletic standpoint, speaking specifically about football (it's the main driver of expansion), as bad as were under CGC, GT is still one of the better programs in the ACC:
View attachment 15401
Think about that graphic. Even with the CGC years, GT is still within a striking distance of the same winning percentage of FSU...that team making all the noise right now. Also, look at the discussed B1G targets (GT, FSU, Miami, UNC, UVA). Outside of FSU, GT has more conference championships than all of them, and has a better winning percentage than all but FSU and Miami.
School Presidents understand that a school's athletic fortunes can change. GT has historically been an above average to good program:
Winsipedia - College football ALL-TIME RECORD (WINNING %) (*minimum 100 games) rankings
Winsipedia - List and chart/infographic of schools and teams with the best ALL-TIME RECORD (WINNING %) (*minimum 100 games) in college football historywww.winsipedia.com
In terms of the B1G, GT is in the same winning band as Wisconsin/UCLA/Mich State/Minnesota. We've been a better program than Iowa/Minnesota/Maryland/Purdue/Illinois/Northwestern/Indiana. For those that don't think GT can be competitive in the B1G, I suggest you look closer. GT will continue to do what GT has always done: win 6-8 games a season, and enjoy a special season every 4-5 years.
There's also the intangible quality of a school that B1G Presidents look at, and for the B1G, it's an important issue.
This is one of the big reasons B1G Presidents have coveted GT for years. Combine that with all of the above, and you don't have to go far at all into the wish bag of what makes a school attractive to the B1G conference. GT checks all the boxes...even if our own fans don't think so.
There's a reason why GT was invited a decade ago, and you don't have to look too hard to see why GT may actually be in a stronger position now than we were then.
That area is not considered a sports hotbed. Loosing pro sports team is not a good indicator towards college sports, but it does matter. NHL also has Atlanta back in its sights for expansion or relocation. The melting pot that is Atlanta is the home of college football and we now have the opportunity to build on the foundation of this year. 24 teams each for the B10 and $EC is where this thing is headed and we will be in the B10. I also believe that some of the current B10 and $EC teams will be told to kick rocks, IF the main 3 plus 1 (Football, Men's basketball, Baseball + Women's basketball) are not competitive more years than not.The B1G didn’t want Cal, apparently, though, which is a thing that makes you worry a bit based on those same graphs. Almost double the research dollars of GT and the SF/SJ media market, which is also quite large. Maybe they don’t think they would turn it around in football. Cause Oregon is another big outlier on that chart without research $ or a media market…
The ownership of those teams is famously bad - it’s still probably not a big enough market for two teams but neither is Atlanta or anywhere else in the country anytime soon. I’d think the Warriors and Niners would show that a winner could do well there still. Better than Seattle or Eugene.That area is not considered a sports hotbed. Loosing pro sports team is not a good indicator towards college sports, but it does matter. NHL also has Atlanta back in its sights for expansion or relocation. The melting pot that is Atlanta is the home of college football and we now have the opportunity to build on the foundation of this year. 24 teams each for the B10 and $EC is where this thing is headed and we will be in the B10. I also believe that some of the current B10 and $EC teams will be told to kick rocks, IF the main 3 plus 1 (Football, Men's basketball, Baseball + Women's basketball) are not competitive more years than not.
The 49ers, Warriors, and Giants all do great. They had two NFL teams, two MLB teams, an NHL team, a NBA team, an MLS team, and two PAC12 teams. That’s a lot of sports.That area is not considered a sports hotbed. Loosing pro sports team is not a good indicator towards college sports, but it does matter. NHL also has Atlanta back in its sights for expansion or relocation. The melting pot that is Atlanta is the home of college football and we now have the opportunity to build on the foundation of this year. 24 teams each for the B10 and $EC is where this thing is headed and we will be in the B10. I also believe that some of the current B10 and $EC teams will be told to kick rocks, IF the main 3 plus 1 (Football, Men's basketball, Baseball + Women's basketball) are not competitive more years than not.
BiG I
Rutgers
Minnesota
Indiana
SECheat
Arkansas
Miss State (usually)
USC east (usually)
Sometimes they catch lightning in a bottle, but mostly as mediocre as the ACC bottom tier
It's all about the hype
Regarding Raycom, if FSU signed the agreement in good faith, and that faith can be shown to have been betrayed, then I guess they would have a case.If two things that are alleged are indeed true - one, that Swofford forced the Raycom deal due to nepotism and two, that the E$PN deal only actually runs through 2027, then F$U may truly have found the silver bullet to exit the ACC. Discovery is a b!tch.
Probably Rutgers and Maryland too.You can add Illinois to the B1G.
If I’m looking for a win, I had rather play the bottom 6 in the Big than anyone in the ACC.You can add Illinois to the B1G.
Bottom 6 ?If I’m looking for a win, I had rather play the bottom 6 in the Big than anyone in the ACC.
That 4th and 18 analogy is what I was thinking before I read your post. Spot on.I too am scratching my head over this. At the end of the day I wonder if this isn't a publicity stunt to appease their idiotic fan base. You know, like people in corporations or politicians do when they form a committee to create the illusion of "something is being done about (insert problem here)."
If this IS real, this is the football equaivalent of going for it on 4th and 18 on your own 20 yard line. They are going to look like either geniuses or fools....there is no middle ground. But as Jesus said, it's better to be hot or cold than be lukewarm about things or wtte,
Although there was no playoff then, Auburn in 2004 was undefeated with a SEC title and was left out of the championship game.Not sure what you are disagreeing with. We both are saying there is no way the SEC was going to get left out, no matter what the scenario was or how many times the narrative had to change to make that happen.
My point is that the SEC has been relentless for decades pushing a narrative and promoting its teams that puts them in the driver’s seat whenever their is a close choice to be made by writers, pollsters and playoff committees.
They’ve worked the refs a long time. Just wish the ACC had done that.