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CU has rejoined the Big 12 and broken college football - talking out asses continues

This. Even imagining half shares, that's $140M. The offer from Apple was supposedly something like $200M (CU included), and the TV partners for the B1G didn't even submit a bid.

I really don't understand the math if the B1G partners would rather have the 4 you list at $140M rather than a 10 team Pac12 at (let's say) $220M.
See my previous post. The networks are done with all the individual conference deals. It’s about the package as a whole, not individual school value, IMO. They will continue to ask themselves, “does school X make our B1G/SEC/Big12 package stronger”, not “does school X bring equal value as all the other programs currently in the conference”
 
Depending on the contracts it could be something the existing schools won't agree to whether too much streaming or scheduling/travel issues. TBD
Certainly. I wouldn't doubt the existing 14 in the B1G may have issues adding two teams in the Pacific Northwest. That's a whole other ball of wax.

I just couldn't get my head around how/why this was gonna be paid for. Based on the article, it's possible to squeeze some money out without reducing the existing shares. Whether it's financially beneficial to the networks is still to be seen.
 
See my previous post. The networks are done with all the individual conference deals. It’s about the package as a whole, not individual school value, IMO. They will continue to ask themselves, “does school X make our B1G/SEC/Big12 package stronger”, not “does school X bring equal value as all the other programs currently in the conference”
The TV networks are not in the business of making football conferences stronger as a package, they are in the business of making profits.

Sure, if making a package stronger increases their profits, it makes sense, but just making the product stronger by investing more money without an ROI would quickly get a CEO canned.
 
The TV networks are not in the business of making football conferences stronger as a package, they are in the business of making profits.

Sure, if making a package stronger increases their profits, it makes sense, but just making the product stronger by investing more money without an ROI would quickly get a CEO canned.
Uhhh making a conference stronger and marketing it as a package is exactly what leads to increasing profits. What do you think is happening here? What do you think the NFL is?
 
I don't think many people in DC care about WVU. Morgantown is closer to Pittsburg than DC. And WVU definitely doesn't give the SEC in-market carriage rates for DC. There are a bunch of network affiliates in WV.


both our posts can be true. I believe the more WVU alums end up in the DC area than anywhere else (not immediately finding the numbers). Proximity to Morgantown isn't terribly relevant to this discussion, as the state flagship school is going to pull students from all over the state.

Not necessarily true. When I went to college in DC, I did see some WVU representation in addition to UVA, VT, and UMD.
I realize I'm a few pages late, but piss off. I've been otherwise occupied.

When I was involved in the DC alumi club network back in the 20-aughts, WVU had one of the largest alumni bases in the area, rivaled only by PSU. Tons of Marylanders who didn't (or couldn't) go to College Park would go to Morgantown to drink and burn couches. The return home to continue drinking
 
Don't you ****ing people have jobs? Jesus ****.
Working Homer Simpson GIF
 
I hope the end game is basically that we have 8 regional "conferences" of 8 teams, all competing under the same rules with a scheduling and playoff matrix, and all of us under a revenue system that provides a somewhat level playing field for competitive balance.

You know, pretty much how CFB was 35 years ago but with certain issues improved or fixed.
 
I hope the end game is basically that we have 8 regional "conferences" of 8 teams, all competing under the same rules with a scheduling and playoff matrix, and all of us under a revenue system that provides a somewhat level playing field for competitive balance.

You know, pretty much how CFB was 35 years ago but with certain issues improved or fixed.
Feels like we are taking a big step towards this right now. My fear is that what’s good for the game isn’t always viewed as good for business. Greed ****s stuff up a lot. We can all get fat, nobody has to get slaughtered.
 
I realize I'm a few pages late, but piss off. I've been otherwise occupied.

When I was involved in the DC alumi club network back in the 20-aughts, WVU had one of the largest alumni bases in the area, rivaled only by PSU. Tons of Marylanders who didn't (or couldn't) go to College Park would go to Morgantown to drink and burn couches. The return home to continue drinking

That aligns with what I saw back then.
 
I hope the end game is basically that we have 8 regional "conferences" of 8 teams, all competing under the same rules with a scheduling and playoff matrix, and all of us under a revenue system that provides a somewhat level playing field for competitive balance.

You know, pretty much how CFB was 35 years ago but with certain issues improved or fixed.
Not sure how we get there from here, but would co-sign that plan.
 
I hope the end game is basically that we have 8 regional "conferences" of 8 teams, all competing under the same rules with a scheduling and playoff matrix, and all of us under a revenue system that provides a somewhat level playing field for competitive balance.

You know, pretty much how CFB was 35 years ago but with certain issues improved or fixed.
SEC and B1G have to come together at some point. Maybe consolidation over the next few years is the first step and then merging the two leagues is the next step in 2030? Need centralized governing
 
Uhhh making a conference stronger and marketing it as a package is exactly what leads to increasing profits. What do you think is happening here? What do you think the NFL is?
That's gotta have to be a pretty big rate of return for basically an investment. Hundreds of millions of extra dollars spent, for temporary ownership of rights. The owners are still the schools, this isn't the NFL yet by a long shot.
 
Not sure how we get there from here, but would co-sign that plan.
Eventually the P2 gobble everything up, 30-32 teams each. Then they merge in order to jointly negotiate TV contracts and play under the same rules.

The the newly formed CFL divides into 6-8 regional divisions. Division winners and wild cards compete for the title.
 
would you please walk me through the logic that led you to this conclusion? I'm honestly not seeing why that would ever have to happen
Equal rules, level scheduling, revenue sharing, collective bargaining, one league to negotiate media contracts. Look at the NFL pre merger. That’s where this is heading… and then ultimately a full merger into one league. It’s the most profitable business model for the sport
 
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