Noonzy wrote:DudeAnon wrote:My understanding (which is not very informed) is that football programs are almost always a cash cow, winning or not.
That is not my understanding at all. Somewhere I read about the schools who actually came out ahead in FB and there were only a few like Texas. Most times the FB program is a drain on the school's funds and is a losing proposition. Just think about the cost of recruiting, travel for the teams, bands cheerleaders etc-crazy money.
DudeAnon wrote:My understanding (which is not very informed) is that football programs are almost always a cash cow, winning or not.
Friarfan2 wrote:Rutgers loses $28 mil on atheltics per year. Their tv increase should be about $10-20 mil, they should get some ticket revenue increase. So essentially they are going to have the same budget they had while in the big east (which clearly didn't work then) but will be competing against big 10 schools. Can't see how this is going to translate into winning seasons. Hey, at least they get to brag about playing ohio state.
Regarding the academic prestige of the big 10, I don't buy it. Northwestern is an excellent school. Michigan is a very good school. What else is in that conference? Large land grant universities that are generally easy enough to get into if you arer an in state applicant. I am not too impressed by schools like minnesota, iowa, penn state, illinois, nebraska, michigan state or indiana. I think most butler students would look down on indiana, most creighton students would look down on nebraska, etc... It is a good fit for rutgers as they are the same type of school, but the academic side of the coin is kind of hogwash and a lot of PR spin. At the end of the day it is still just a collection of state schools.
marquette wrote:Friarfan2 wrote:Rutgers loses $28 mil on atheltics per year. Their tv increase should be about $10-20 mil, they should get some ticket revenue increase. So essentially they are going to have the same budget they had while in the big east (which clearly didn't work then) but will be competing against big 10 schools. Can't see how this is going to translate into winning seasons. Hey, at least they get to brag about playing ohio state.
Regarding the academic prestige of the big 10, I don't buy it. Northwestern is an excellent school. Michigan is a very good school. What else is in that conference? Large land grant universities that are generally easy enough to get into if you arer an in state applicant. I am not too impressed by schools like minnesota, iowa, penn state, illinois, nebraska, michigan state or indiana. I think most butler students would look down on indiana, most creighton students would look down on nebraska, etc... It is a good fit for rutgers as they are the same type of school, but the academic side of the coin is kind of hogwash and a lot of PR spin. At the end of the day it is still just a collection of state schools.
Unlike the Big East, in the B1G fans are raised to hate each other's teams. As such, being raised by a UConn alum and a UW alum (yep, born and raised a fan of both the B1G and Big East), I believe I can be totally unbiased when I call bs on this. This is what is referred to as "Private School Elitism" and possibly "East Coast Bias". The B1G is, after the Ivy League, the most academically prestigious conference in the country.
Every year a list of "Public Ivies" is put out. This list is composed of public universities that are capable of "successfully competing with the Ivy League schools in academic rigor... attracting superstar faculty and in competing for the best and brightest students of all races." This list includes (but is not limited to) Penn State, Rutgers, Maryland, Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. That is every B1G school except Nebraska. You might also want to look into the CIC and what it means for research institutions (as an aside, UConn is also on there). In general the B1G wanted to expand into new markets and make more money, but the thing that separates them from every other conference (except the new Big East and the Ivy League) is that they considered institutional fit and academic prestige as much or more so than athletics. We could take a lesson from the B1G on inter-conference academic cooperation. Frankly, we are a great and prestigious collection of universities, but the only one of our schools on the same academic level as the B1G schools is Georgetown. Several of us are on that next level, but still not there yet.
Friarfan2 wrote:Rutgers loses $28 mil on atheltics per year. Their tv increase should be about $10-20 mil, they should get some ticket revenue increase. So essentially they are going to have the same budget they had while in the big east (which clearly didn't work then) but will be competing against big 10 schools. Can't see how this is going to translate into winning seasons. Hey, at least they get to brag about playing ohio state.
Regarding the academic prestige of the big 10, I don't buy it. Northwestern is an excellent school. Michigan is a very good school. What else is in that conference? Large land grant universities that are generally easy enough to get into if you arer an in state applicant. I am not too impressed by schools like minnesota, iowa, penn state, illinois, nebraska, michigan state or indiana. I think most butler students would look down on indiana, most creighton students would look down on nebraska, etc... It is a good fit for rutgers as they are the same type of school, but the academic side of the coin is kind of hogwash and a lot of PR spin. At the end of the day it is still just a collection of state schools.
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