by GoldenWarrior11 » Thu Jul 21, 2022 1:18 pm
Excellent data and analysis. Paint Touches is an incredible MU fan resource for those that are unfamiliar.
A majority of the revenues to Big East schools comes from our TV deal with Fox (the 12-year, $500 million deal signed in 2013-2014); it continues to be rumored that the next TV deal will fall somewhere between $5 and $8 million annually per member, so a bump in pay from that area is expected. PT argued that Fox overpayed for the Big East TV package, but I would argue otherwise; FS1 was a start-up network (which was formerly SPEED) that needed sports inventory to fill up TV spots. FS1 was never intended to compete directly with ESPN; it was meant to be on-par with ESPN2 (in terms of viewership), with FOX continuing add more college and professional sports for the main network. Unlike ESPN TV deals (cough, cough, the AAC TV deal), every single Big East game was televised nationally. That exposure and presence has provided unquantifiable benefits to the Big East and to its members. From this regard, comparing viewership on FS1 vs. ESPN is comparing apples to oranges. I continue to highlight the attendance figures for Big East teams (as well as the BET); if those were dipping or dropping - then it would be a real red flag; nationwide, and specifically in college football, attendance is dropping steadily. The allure of watching games from home (w/ HD TVs, your own bathroom, cheaper food, etc.) continues to increase over time. However, BE attendance remains incredibly strong (and remains a top-5 conference) and that is a huge plus.
A key point is that a main source of revenue remains from the tournament credits. Unfortunately, without Villanova, the tournament credits are nowhere near as high as what have been paying out. Perhaps with Jay Wright's retirement, it allows a new program to compete for deep tournament runs and have another program represent the league. Or, perhaps we struggle getting E8/F4/NC programs annually. This will be a key area moving forward. Another, potentially new source of revenue, remains via expansion. Adding teams means adding content, and adding content also means adding sessions to the BET, which creates more revenues. Remember, the BET used to have 16 teams in it, offering eight different ticket sessions; with eleven teams, it is only five. I'd argue the financial value of keeping the double R/R format has run its course, and the need to expand is higher than ever. The league needs more content, more basketball strength and more opportunities to host games at MSG for the BET. I remain in the boat of adding Gonzaga (it's their travel, not our's), as it is an elite basketball brand that can provide additional viewership opportunities and a program that can compete for deep tournament runs (more tournament credits). If they are willing to travel, sign them up.
I also hope that since the current Big East has proven itself as an elite basketball conference, it moves forward signing short-term TV contract details. One of the biggest mistakes that history has shown to conferences is leagues signing long-term deals with a network (thus quickly outperforming them and being paid below market value). The AAC is guilty of this, as is the ACC. I'd even argue the SEC made a mistake with its previous CBS contract. The Big East should not sign a deal longer than 6 years with Fox, IMO.