JPSchmack wrote:I think the UConn "smoke" is one minor report (AAC television negotiations may be easier with GOR) + one minor comment (Val's comment about how a 20-game double-round robin would mean an 11th team and something they'd consider) and then people's imaginations running amok.
Somehow the fact that because UCF/Memphis/Cincinnati/Houston could be future Big XII targets, the AAC might need to entice them to sign the GOR, and it happening when UConn football just went 1-12, morphed into "The AAC wants to make UConn a second class citizen by paying them less."
The AAC Commish downplayed a ton of the smoke in an article today:
https://www.ctpost.com/sports/jeffjacob ... 458583.php
“The report wasn’t accurate in key areas,” American commissioner Mike Aresco said Tuesday. “We haven’t asked our schools for anything at this point. We’re in the preliminary stages of important negotiation. Our formal period starts next year. We’re discussing a lot of things.”
“I don’t see it,” Aresco said on unequal distribution. “I think the majority of our schools will agree with me. I firmly support our current policy of equal revenue sharing. We don’t have entirely equal sharing right now because of the money left over from the old Big East... But as we move forward our plan has always been equal sharing of revenue. Unequal sharing is not who we are. We turned down Boise when they were ready to join. They said they wanted a special deal, they wanted more revenue than the others and we said no. I felt that was the foundation of our conference.”
adoraz wrote:So, here's my theory:
*UConn and the Big East plan to align next year, though not planning to announce until end of the season. Remember, WSU's addition to the AAC wasn't announced until April 2017 (and they started basketball play a few months later).
*The AAC knows that UConn is gone, so in an effort to save face they brought up GOR to the major football schools. UConn wasn't asked because they knew they were gone. The MSG announcement was made after UConn's agreement to join, and the AAC found out shortly after. That explains the rushed Monday morning GOR request.
*Val is happy to finally broadcast some major women's games on Fox and FS1.
*Fox will up the amount of money given out per school.
*UConn will go independent in football, and Fox will ensure them multiple P5 games per year (since they have contracts with the Big Ten, etc).
*Fox will give the Big East secondary package to ESPN (currently with CBS). ESPN may try to lock some of the content behind ESPN+ ($5 a month).
*ESPN is happy because 1. they don't need to pay UConn P5 money 2. they still keep some UConn games without spending extra 3. they gain Big East inventory from 10 other schools.
Again, just pure speculation but I don't see why it couldn't happen.
I doubt all this happens, but I don't think it's unrealistic.
adoraz wrote:So, here's my theory:
*UConn and the Big East plan to align next year, though not planning to announce until end of the season. Remember, WSU's addition to the AAC wasn't announced until April 2017 (and they started basketball play a few months later).
*The AAC knows that UConn is gone, so in an effort to save face they brought up GOR to the major football schools. UConn wasn't asked because they just found out that they were leaving. The MSG announcement was made after UConn's agreement to join, and the AAC found out shortly after. That explains the rushed Monday morning GOR request.
*Val is happy to finally broadcast some major women's games on Fox and FS1.
*Fox will up the amount of money given out per school.
*UConn will go independent in football, and Fox will ensure them multiple P5 games per year (since they have contracts with the Big Ten, etc).
*Fox will give the Big East secondary package to ESPN (currently with CBS). ESPN may try to lock some of the content behind ESPN+ ($5 a month).
*ESPN is happy because 1. they don't need to pay UConn P5 money 2. they still keep some UConn games without spending extra 3. they gain Big East inventory from 10 other schools.
Again, just pure speculation but I don't see why it couldn't happen.
I doubt all this happens, but I don't think it's unrealistic.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:adoraz wrote:So, here's my theory:
*UConn and the Big East plan to align next year, though not planning to announce until end of the season. Remember, WSU's addition to the AAC wasn't announced until April 2017 (and they started basketball play a few months later).
*The AAC knows that UConn is gone, so in an effort to save face they brought up GOR to the major football schools. UConn wasn't asked because they just found out that they were leaving. The MSG announcement was made after UConn's agreement to join, and the AAC found out shortly after. That explains the rushed Monday morning GOR request.
*Val is happy to finally broadcast some major women's games on Fox and FS1.
*Fox will up the amount of money given out per school.
*UConn will go independent in football, and Fox will ensure them multiple P5 games per year (since they have contracts with the Big Ten, etc).
*Fox will give the Big East secondary package to ESPN (currently with CBS). ESPN may try to lock some of the content behind ESPN+ ($5 a month).
*ESPN is happy because 1. they don't need to pay UConn P5 money 2. they still keep some UConn games without spending extra 3. they gain Big East inventory from 10 other schools.
Again, just pure speculation but I don't see why it couldn't happen.
I doubt all this happens, but I don't think it's unrealistic.
*And ESPN gets to drive down the value of the American's next TV deal by causing instability with its membership (which is what it did to the old Big East). They save money on offering cheap filler content for ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN+.
adoraz wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:adoraz wrote:So, here's my theory:
*UConn and the Big East plan to align next year, though not planning to announce until end of the season. Remember, WSU's addition to the AAC wasn't announced until April 2017 (and they started basketball play a few months later).
*The AAC knows that UConn is gone, so in an effort to save face they brought up GOR to the major football schools. UConn wasn't asked because they just found out that they were leaving. The MSG announcement was made after UConn's agreement to join, and the AAC found out shortly after. That explains the rushed Monday morning GOR request.
*Val is happy to finally broadcast some major women's games on Fox and FS1.
*Fox will up the amount of money given out per school.
*UConn will go independent in football, and Fox will ensure them multiple P5 games per year (since they have contracts with the Big Ten, etc).
*Fox will give the Big East secondary package to ESPN (currently with CBS). ESPN may try to lock some of the content behind ESPN+ ($5 a month).
*ESPN is happy because 1. they don't need to pay UConn P5 money 2. they still keep some UConn games without spending extra 3. they gain Big East inventory from 10 other schools.
Again, just pure speculation but I don't see why it couldn't happen.
I doubt all this happens, but I don't think it's unrealistic.
*And ESPN gets to drive down the value of the American's next TV deal by causing instability with its membership (which is what it did to the old Big East). They save money on offering cheap filler content for ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN+.
Very good point.
I'd like to see the argument against my theory. It appears to benefit everyone.
And hey, if I'm wrong that just means the Garden agreed to a 6 year extension with us (removing the 2022 opt out and adding 2 years) without needing to bring UConn into the discussion.
adoraz wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:adoraz wrote:So, here's my theory:
*UConn and the Big East plan to align next year, though not planning to announce until end of the season. Remember, WSU's addition to the AAC wasn't announced until April 2017 (and they started basketball play a few months later).
*The AAC knows that UConn is gone, so in an effort to save face they brought up GOR to the major football schools. UConn wasn't asked because they just found out that they were leaving. The MSG announcement was made after UConn's agreement to join, and the AAC found out shortly after. That explains the rushed Monday morning GOR request.
*Val is happy to finally broadcast some major women's games on Fox and FS1.
*Fox will up the amount of money given out per school.
*UConn will go independent in football, and Fox will ensure them multiple P5 games per year (since they have contracts with the Big Ten, etc).
*Fox will give the Big East secondary package to ESPN (currently with CBS). ESPN may try to lock some of the content behind ESPN+ ($5 a month).
*ESPN is happy because 1. they don't need to pay UConn P5 money 2. they still keep some UConn games without spending extra 3. they gain Big East inventory from 10 other schools.
Again, just pure speculation but I don't see why it couldn't happen.
I doubt all this happens, but I don't think it's unrealistic.
*And ESPN gets to drive down the value of the American's next TV deal by causing instability with its membership (which is what it did to the old Big East). They save money on offering cheap filler content for ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN+.
Very good point.
I'd like to see the argument against my theory. It appears to benefit everyone.
And hey, if I'm wrong that just means the Garden agreed to a 6 year extension with us (removing the 2022 opt out and adding 2 years) without needing to bring UConn into the discussion.
Xudash wrote:I think both your comments/thoughts are fantastic - - in a truly good way.
Quick question - and something else that could be spurring this along: when does the old BE separation money run out for UCONN? In a world where their finances are already a mess, that will be like gtmo receiving extended shore leave (a different kind of nasty, but nasty nonetheless).
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Xudash wrote:I think both your comments/thoughts are fantastic - - in a truly good way.
Quick question - and something else that could be spurring this along: when does the old BE separation money run out for UCONN? In a world where their finances are already a mess, that will be like gtmo receiving extended shore leave (a different kind of nasty, but nasty nonetheless).
It already ran out. UC/UConn/USF were receiving nearly $10 million annually between the AAC TV deal, BE War Chest funds, CFP money, NCAA Credits, etc. from 2014-2018. In order for those schools to not take a paycut, the next deal needs to be at least $10 million per school per year, which the current estimates for the conference fall short of the projections (the SBJ said 3-4x the current deal, which would mean it to between $5 and $7 million).
The divorce settlement (war chest) funds were around $3 million annually for those three schools. This was part of the $100 million the C7 gave to the AAC in return for the Big East name and history. Those were paid out over the five years post-split. I want to say that between $85 and $90 million stayed with UC/UConn/USF and the remainder was paid out equally to the rest of the new AAC members.
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