Techster
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 18,235
I can't speak for @Augusta_Jacket , but I believe he was responding to people who are saying that ACC teams will flock to the Big12. I have many doubts that any team will leave the ACC to make less money in the Big12. I doubt it even more with the GOR issues and with an exit fee from the ACC. Even if the GOR is nullified and the exit fee is reduced to $30 million, what school would pay $30 million to move to a conference with more travel and $2-5 million less in revenue per year? (using your estimates for the difference in revenue.)
All of the prognosticators predicted that the ACC would be the first P5 conference to fall. The PAC12 fell. Now, prognosticators are saying that the ACC is the weakest of the P4 teams, and will be the next to fall. If we ignore the GOR and exit fee issues, the ACC's contract through 2036 is larger than the Big12's. Yet the prognosticators speak as though the ACC is well behind the Big12. The 2024 Big12 won't have any teams left with a real national brand. The only CFP appearance left in the Big12 will be TCU's 2022 appearance. The 2024 ACC will still have FSU, UNC, Miami, Clemson, VT. Maybe FSU will leave in 2025. Maybe UNC will be able to overcome the political issues that have arisen in the last couple of weeks and leave in 2026-28. However, there are still contractual issues involved, and I think it is just as likely that all of the teams stay until at least 2030. There is no measure by which the Big12 is a better conference than the ACC. The ACC isn't at the level of the SEC or Big10, but they are solidly the third conference, no matter what measure you want to use. All of the prognosticators simply ignore that.
I don't remember seeing anyone say the ACC would be first to fall...strictly because the ACC had the GOR. If anything, the Big 12 was targeted as "most likely to fall" given everyone knew UTexas and OU were leaving.
I think the issue with the "ACC is solidly 3rd" statement is that it includes UNC and FSU...for now. At present, yes, the ACC is slightly ahead of the Big12.
The discussion is more about what happens to the ACC when UNC and FSU (at minimum) leave for either the SEC or B1G. The calculus of which conference is better off changes at that point, and ACC teams leaving for the Big 12 is definitely on the table when that happens.