kayako wrote:Football programs left behind via contraction will be competing for the G5 (G6?) Championship. Their program value would be cut in half overnight.
adoraz wrote:AAC teams I think earn around $10 million on their brand new contract (1/3-1/5 of P5 teams) and that has a lot of downsides too (ESPN+ costs).
kayako wrote:adoraz wrote:AAC teams I think earn around $10 million on their brand new contract (1/3-1/5 of P5 teams) and that has a lot of downsides too (ESPN+ costs).
Agree with everything except afik it's far below $10M if the deal was $1B for 12 years and 12 teams (counting Navy and WSU as one team). Probably around $7M or maybe even lower with the production costs. If the BE is able to get any kind of meaningful raise from current $4.2M per school contract, in addition to much higher projected tourney credits distributed to each member, it'd make sense to join the BE and try independence (curious how uconn fares in the next ten years), or form a football-only conference with ten schools or so of the best remaining schools (hypothetically bottom few B12, top few aac, uconn, BYU, etc). But no, this is far fetched. I expect status quo.
kayako wrote:adoraz wrote:AAC teams I think earn around $10 million on their brand new contract (1/3-1/5 of P5 teams) and that has a lot of downsides too (ESPN+ costs).
Agree with everything except afik it's far below $10M if the deal was $1B for 12 years and 12 teams (counting Navy and WSU as one team). Probably around $7M or maybe even lower with the production costs. If the BE is able to get any kind of meaningful raise from current $4.2M per school contract, in addition to much higher projected tourney credits distributed to each member, it'd make sense to join the BE and try independence (curious how uconn fares in the next ten years), or form a football-only conference with ten schools or so of the best remaining schools (hypothetically bottom few B12, top few aac, uconn, BYU, etc). But no, this is far fetched. I expect status quo.
whalerfan wrote:First, it's great to be back in the Big East and I sincerely hope the UConn independent thing works out for football. It's enjoyable going to games 20 minutes from home. As for the AAC contract it averages out to $7m/year but starts out much lower. Also, I know first hand that three institutions sent out RFP's for video production services (Tulsa, Memphis and Houston) so they are really behind the curve when it comes to providing content. It's going to cost these schools at least $1m to do what ESPN expects.
Lastly, I look forward to razzing my buddy who is a PC season ticket holder. It'll be nice going "toe to toe" with him in a conference matchup.
Xudash wrote:Media agreement renewals are coming up.
I had no idea that CBS was giving up the SEC:
https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2019/12/cbs-dropping-sec-espn-abc-deal/
We are 5 years away from our original Fox media agreement maturity date. Can’t wait to get past this COVID-19 b/s to see if the BE and Fox simply reset and extend the clock on the agreement and to see what kind of $ bump it receives with the addition of UCONN.
Otherwise, we continue to pile up NCAAT Units with a denominator that is moving from 10 to 11. Unless the addition of a 12th member is accretive to the value of the media agreement, we should probably stay at 11. I get the argument about 12 getting us to an extra session at the BET and more money for that, but all that still has to translate to more revenue in such a way as to offset the denominator increasing from 11 to 12.
The 2011 and 2016 NCAA Division III men's basketball champions are joining the Division I ranks starting in the 2021-22 season. The University of St. Thomas announced Wednesday that it received NCAA approval for the jump, making it the first university in the modern history of the NCAA to go from non-scholarship Division III directly to Division I
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