apatriot1776
Ramblin' Wreck
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Seems we’re in decent shape revenue wise. Not too far to go to break into that top-25 area.
Seems we’re in decent shape revenue wise. Not too far to go to break into that top-25 area.
Seems we’re in decent shape revenue wise. Not too far to go to break into that top-25 area.
It's that B1G tv money. The very reason Clemson and FSU want out.Not gonna lie, Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota being THAT high is pretty shocking...
Not Debbie Downer to say so at all. I take it as a positive sign that we are mid-pack in the ACC with a 7-6 football team and a non-tournament basketball team.Take this with a grain of salt...no private schools. No USC, Notre Dame, etc. Not to be Debbie Downer. We do have room to move up with improved future FB and BB seasons.
Seems we’re in decent shape revenue wise. Not too far to go to break into that top-25 area.
Seems we’re in decent shape revenue wise. Not too far to go to break into that top-25 area.
Sorry leatherneckjacket I’m not sure what you mean could you please explain what you mean.What is problematic about this chart is that our athletic program does not come close to either Virginia or UNC despite the fact that we have similar revenue and are in the same conference.
And UCLA being that low.Not gonna lie, Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota being THAT high is pretty shocking...
Our sports programs collectively are significantly worse than either UNC or Virginia despite the fact we have similar revenue, play in the same conference and fund fewer programs.Sorry leatherneckjacket I’m not sure what you mean could you please explain what you mean.
As a counterpoint, UNC's and UVA's revenue has significantly exceeded GT's in recent years. For example, UVA took in over $100M more than GT over the 3 years immediately prior to 2023. My takeaway from the chart is we are finally catching up with our near-peer schools - a positive sign. Hopefully, we can turn that into better performance across our sports.Our sports programs collectively are significantly worse than either UNC or Virginia despite the fact we have similar revenue, play in the same conference and fund fewer programs.
As a whole, I wouldn't necessarily agree with that. They have some great programs, but so do we. It depends on how you want to count quality of programs. I'd put our football team above both of them (minus the last couple of years we don't want to talk about). UNC is blueblood in basketball and UVa has been very good, while we've been down. We dominate both in volleyball, are better in golf and tennis. We hold our own in S&D and T&F. Baseball is up and down. Those sports we overlap in, except for BB, I'd take us over them. Those we don't have (soccer, lacrosse, gymnastics), don't matter.Our sports programs collectively are significantly worse than either UNC or Virginia despite the fact we have similar revenue, play in the same conference and fund fewer programs.
Winning NCAA Championships matter for an Athletic Department. UNC has way more than GT. No comparison. That we don’t play in those sports is a lick on GT.As a whole, I wouldn't necessarily agree with that. They have some great programs, but so do we. It depends on how you want to count quality of programs. I'd put our football team above both of them (minus the last couple of years we don't want to talk about). UNC is blueblood in basketball and UVa has been very good, while we've been down. We dominate both in volleyball, are better in golf and tennis. We hold our own in S&D and T&F. Baseball is up and down. Those sports we overlap in, except for BB, I'd take us over them. Those we don't have (soccer, lacrosse, gymnastics), don't matter.
LOL! Well, um, ok. You can believe what you want to believe. UNC and Virginia are almost always in or near the top 10 in the NCAA director's cup standings and we rarely break the top 50.As a whole, I wouldn't necessarily agree with that. They have some great programs, but so do we. It depends on how you want to count quality of programs. I'd put our football team above both of them (minus the last couple of years we don't want to talk about). UNC is blueblood in basketball and UVa has been very good, while we've been down. We dominate both in volleyball, are better in golf and tennis. We hold our own in S&D and T&F. Baseball is up and down. Those sports we overlap in, except for BB, I'd take us over them. Those we don't have (soccer, lacrosse, gymnastics), don't matter.
Directors cup counts the quantity of programs. We do not have enough funded sports to compete. Not a fair measure for performance vs budget.LOL! Well, um, ok. You can believe what you want to believe. UNC and Virginia are almost always in or near the top 10 in the NCAA director's cup standings and we rarely break the top 50.
It counts your performance in the sports you compete. We have less programs, but we also perform towards the bottom of the ACC in most of those programs in which we compete. Outside of golf, which program at Tech is always in the top 25?Directors cup counts the quantity of programs. We do not have enough funded sports to compete. Not a fair measure for performance vs budget.
True - it is way in our favor not funding other programs. You rational is self defeating.Directors cup counts the quantity of programs. We do not have enough funded sports to compete. Not a fair measure for performance vs budget.
If we’d stop the stupid hires and go get a quality HC, we’d be much better off. Carson, Lewis, and Collins were all stupid hires all about 25 years apart.As a counterpoint, UNC's and UVA's revenue has significantly exceeded GT's in recent years. For example, UVA took in over $100M more than GT over the 3 years immediately prior to 2023. My takeaway from the chart is we are finally catching up with our near-peer schools - a positive sign. Hopefully, we can turn that into better performance across our sports.