GoldenWarrior11 » Tue Jul 17, 2018 8:36 am
I do think we will get a bump in our next TV deal - but mostly because I think Fox will get competition from our content. I have said, and continue to believe, that ESPN would absolutely make a push to regain our rights. The Big East was ESPN's baby. I think after it helped sell off its pieces, and - in-turn - attempt to devalue the league, there is a little bit of seller's remorse. For all the attempts to sell the narrative that the "Big East Died", that could not be further from the truth. In fact, it is now recognized as a top basketball conference. Getting their rights back gives them substantial opportunity: including Big East/ACC shootouts and extending the Gavitt Games to ensure all/most games are on ESPN. The fact that the Big East remains in big markets in the Midwest and East Coast will always provide viewership opportunity, and our on-court success provide the results. Finally, with the rise in viewership interest from both women's basketball and lacrosse, two sports we also do very well with, I think we have the content to sell and market as well.
Expansion aside, I do think extending the conference slate to 20-games is inevitable and natural. It provides more content to provide for networks. I'll leave it at that.
Other goals that the league should have: getting a scheduling alliance with the Big 12, extending the current deal with the B1G (Gavitt Games), and the pursuit of a preseason Old Big East shootout at Madison Square Garden involved the C5 (G'Town, Villanova, St. Johns, Seton Hall and Providence) and a rotation of former members (Syracuse, UConn, Pittsburgh, Boston College, Rutgers, Notre Dame or West Virginia). If wanted/needed, we can throw out DePaul/Marquette and Cincinnati/Louisville as well. Additionally, with all of the throwback uniforms craze in sports today, we should definitely have a throwback-themed day where all the Big East teams wear old uniforms, Fox uses old graphics/presentation and honor programs legends of old. Our history (both in and out of conference) is storied and prestigious. While a good portion of the audience was not alive during those times, it makes it all the more important to recognize and give attention to it.
Big difference between the two leagues. The Big East doesn't play football, it's a basketball league formed by private and or Catholic schools. The AAC will outlive the The Big East as we know it today BECAUSE of football, the Big East may even cease to exist in 10 to 15 years for many reasons, chief among them is no public support, small private schools are privately in panic mode right now on how to keep down their skyrocketing costs, and the first cuts will be to the athletic budgets. Declining enrollment in the next few years will just add fuel to the fire. Even the very well heeled will think twice about sending their kids to a small private school like Providence or Seton Hall for an ok but only above average education for $150,000 a year. Those schools certainly won't be getting 40,000 student applicants every spring like UConn gets, and getting a top shelf education on the cheap is a rarity nowadays. UConn is certainly not going to drop football and join a dieing Catholic basketball league.
NJRedman wrote:I don't know about the next five years but some of the folks on the Boneyard think we will be closing our doors as a conference and as schools in 10-15 years!Big difference between the two leagues. The Big East doesn't play football, it's a basketball league formed by private and or Catholic schools. The AAC will outlive the The Big East as we know it today BECAUSE of football, the Big East may even cease to exist in 10 to 15 years for many reasons, chief among them is no public support, small private schools are privately in panic mode right now on how to keep down their skyrocketing costs, and the first cuts will be to the athletic budgets. Declining enrollment in the next few years will just add fuel to the fire. Even the very well heeled will think twice about sending their kids to a small private school like Providence or Seton Hall for an ok but only above average education for $150,000 a year. Those schools certainly won't be getting 40,000 student applicants every spring like UConn gets, and getting a top shelf education on the cheap is a rarity nowadays. UConn is certainly not going to drop football and join a dieing Catholic basketball league.
https://the-boneyard.com/threads/new-fr ... 171/page-3
Oh and he misspelled dying but I went to some fancy private school.
gtmoBlue wrote:GoldenWarrior11 » Tue Jul 17, 2018 8:36 am
I do think we will get a bump in our next TV deal - but mostly because I think Fox will get competition from our content. I have said, and continue to believe, that ESPN would absolutely make a push to regain our rights. The Big East was ESPN's baby. I think after it helped sell off its pieces, and - in-turn - attempt to devalue the league, there is a little bit of seller's remorse. For all the attempts to sell the narrative that the "Big East Died", that could not be further from the truth. In fact, it is now recognized as a top basketball conference. Getting their rights back gives them substantial opportunity: including Big East/ACC shootouts and extending the Gavitt Games to ensure all/most games are on ESPN. The fact that the Big East remains in big markets in the Midwest and East Coast will always provide viewership opportunity, and our on-court success provide the results. Finally, with the rise in viewership interest from both women's basketball and lacrosse, two sports we also do very well with, I think we have the content to sell and market as well.
Expansion aside, I do think extending the conference slate to 20-games is inevitable and natural. It provides more content to provide for networks. I'll leave it at that.
Other goals that the league should have: getting a scheduling alliance with the Big 12, extending the current deal with the B1G (Gavitt Games), and the pursuit of a preseason Old Big East shootout at Madison Square Garden involved the C5 (G'Town, Villanova, St. Johns, Seton Hall and Providence) and a rotation of former members (Syracuse, UConn, Pittsburgh, Boston College, Rutgers, Notre Dame or West Virginia). If wanted/needed, we can throw out DePaul/Marquette and Cincinnati/Louisville as well. Additionally, with all of the throwback uniforms craze in sports today, we should definitely have a throwback-themed day where all the Big East teams wear old uniforms, Fox uses old graphics/presentation and honor programs legends of old. Our history (both in and out of conference) is storied and prestigious. While a good portion of the audience was not alive during those times, it makes it all the more important to recognize and give attention to it.
Great points GW11. Generally great content, also with more of it (extension of GG's, recreation of your BE Shootout, expansion to a 20 game conference slate, a possible BE/B12 or PAC12 series) all will aid in a stronger negotiations position for the conference. More and better hoops content. You are probably correct in stating there should be more vigorous bidding this time around as the BE has established itself as a top hoops conference. Could the contract double in size?
The BEDN is the real sleeper here. The BE should market it as a online platform for all collegiate sports, for all conferences (especially for non-revenue sports and for lesser conferences who have middling tv contracts). Soccer, baseball, volleyball, la Crosse, softball, tennis, etc. If built out as an independent subsidiary...such a platform can grow to be our most important income stream.
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