ohiohsbball wrote:I don't understand this whole move the needle conversation. I hate to say this but look at numbers. No one is watching the Big East on FS1. Its only been 2 years but if the BE stays at 10 and ratings don't improve is Fox going to she'll out that money in 10 years. Absolutely not. The point people are making about Dayton is people will watch. That will help at least a little. Xavier fans don't want to hear that but it's fact. Please stop talking Gonzaga and Uconn. If the BE expands those 2 schools are not options. Won't happen.
R Jay wrote:ohiohsbball wrote:I don't understand this whole move the needle conversation. I hate to say this but look at numbers. No one is watching the Big East on FS1. Its only been 2 years but if the BE stays at 10 and ratings don't improve is Fox going to she'll out that money in 10 years. Absolutely not. The point people are making about Dayton is people will watch. That will help at least a little. Xavier fans don't want to hear that but it's fact. Please stop talking Gonzaga and Uconn. If the BE expands those 2 schools are not options. Won't happen.
People aren't watching FS1 in general. It's not like it's just the Big East is getting bad ratings.
HoosierPal wrote:Xudash wrote:augkash wrote:Xudash does that mean you don't want Dayton in? Lol
At any rate, HoosierPal provided a single metric (i.e. the Nielsen rating) without considering market size, potential or location. My point stands whether it involves UD or XYZ U.
Take UD out of the conversation and my overall point still stands: it's about "move the needle" programs, TV markets and program position and sustainability for generating NCAA Tournament Units. That mix will determine the list of expansion candidates, IF the Big East ever decides it's worthwhile to expand.
Please show your data that refutes ESPN's. Thank you.
They obviously don't move your needle, but people in Dayton watch college basketball. That might move Fox Sports needle, which would trump your needle.
And I assume that IF Dayton played Xavier, no one in Cincy would watch giving it horrible ratings, as it wouldn't be a needle mover.
Xudash wrote:HoosierPal wrote:Xudash wrote:
At any rate, HoosierPal provided a single metric (i.e. the Nielsen rating) without considering market size, potential or location. My point stands whether it involves UD or XYZ U.
Take UD out of the conversation and my overall point still stands: it's about "move the needle" programs, TV markets and program position and sustainability for generating NCAA Tournament Units. That mix will determine the list of expansion candidates, IF the Big East ever decides it's worthwhile to expand.
Please show your data that refutes ESPN's. Thank you.
They obviously don't move your needle, but people in Dayton watch college basketball. That might move Fox Sports needle, which would trump your needle.
And I assume that IF Dayton played Xavier, no one in Cincy would watch giving it horrible ratings, as it wouldn't be a needle mover.
I'm not refuting ESPN's data.
Please let me know if you decide to walk that 1.9 into Fox's offices as the defining argument for UD's inclusion. I want to witness their reaction.
Xudash wrote:HoosierPal wrote:ESPN Data says Dayton is your 'hot spot' candidate.
ESPN published their ratings by market. Dayton finished 7th. Sure those TV's were on The Ohio State U games, Dayton games, Cincy games, etc,. but people in Dayton are watching basketball on TV. That is what Fox Sports 1 should want, VIEWERS. Raleigh-Durham is Tobacco Road, KC is KU and Mizzou, Charlotte heavily ACC (a twist of Davidson perhaps?) and Memphis is Memphis. Sure it's ESPN data, but show me other data that says Dayton is not a TV basketball hot spot.
Louisville’s 13th Year as Top Market Sets Record for Highest Season Average of Any Market
ESPN telecasts in Louisville averaged a metered market-leading 5.9 rating, its 13th straight year at the top and the largest regular-season average for the sport on ESPN in any market on record. Greensboro, with a 3.0 average rating, ended the season with the second highest rating for the fourth consecutive year. Raleigh-Durham (2.7) and Kansas City (2.4) – which were tied for second last season — were the third and fourth top markets, respectively this year. The remaining top 10: Columbus (2.1), Cincinnati (1.9), Dayton (1.9), Indianapolis (1.8), Charlotte (1.8) and Memphis (1.8).
You do understand that the Dayton TMA is ranked 64th in the nation, right? Granted, Omaha comes in at #74, but Omaha isn't adjacent to the Cincinnati TMA, and obviously doesn't have a conference mate right next door (forget SJU and SHU in this regard, given the NY/NJ market). It's just not about a numerical Nielsen rating, it's about market size and location.
Actually, given that the Big East is holding at ten for a while and possibly for a very long time, and knowing that the primary drivers are television and programs that can drive NCAA Units on a sustainable basis, it has to be about "needle moving" and the right TMA mix and proven, sustainable programs.
Today, that only translates to UCONN and Gonzaga; perhaps VCU had Shaka stayed. Nothing else out there moves the needle or makes sense at this point.
HoosierPal wrote:Xudash wrote:augkash wrote:Xudash does that mean you don't want Dayton in? Lol
At any rate, HoosierPal provided a single metric (i.e. the Nielsen rating) without considering market size, potential or location. My point stands whether it involves UD or XYZ U.
Take UD out of the conversation and my overall point still stands: it's about "move the needle" programs, TV markets and program position and sustainability for generating NCAA Tournament Units. That mix will determine the list of expansion candidates, IF the Big East ever decides it's worthwhile to expand.
Please show your data that refutes ESPN's. Thank you.
They obviously don't move your needle, but people in Dayton watch college basketball. That might move Fox Sports needle, which would trump your needle.
And I assume that IF Dayton played Xavier, no one in Cincy would watch giving it horrible ratings, as it wouldn't be a needle mover.
DeltaV wrote:Are there any 'move the needle' programs out there? Would even Gonzaga really get that many casual viewers, let alone Dayton or VCU? Hell, would even Wake Forest or Vanderbilt (in some strange P5->16x4 implosion scenario) really get anyone outside of their alumni excited?
Yes, bringing Dayton into the conference is going to get a lot of viewership from that area...but its still not going to be the numbers that would rival ESPN. Bob in Accounting isn't going to be talking about the Gonzaga Dayton game he randomly decided to flip on.
I don't like to say it, but I think the best thing that would raise our viewership would be FS1 getting a big chunk of BIG games. Nova Providence isn't going to get the casual viewers that Indiana Ohio State would...but if the Big East game has a great finish that runs a few minutes into the beginning of the Big 10 game, that viewer may be willing to tune in next time Providence plays, instead of going with the FSU Clemson game on ESPN that everyone knows will be a woofer.
Xudash wrote:DeltaV wrote:Are there any 'move the needle' programs out there? Would even Gonzaga really get that many casual viewers, let alone Dayton or VCU? Hell, would even Wake Forest or Vanderbilt (in some strange P5->16x4 implosion scenario) really get anyone outside of their alumni excited?
Yes, bringing Dayton into the conference is going to get a lot of viewership from that area...but its still not going to be the numbers that would rival ESPN. Bob in Accounting isn't going to be talking about the Gonzaga Dayton game he randomly decided to flip on.
I don't like to say it, but I think the best thing that would raise our viewership would be FS1 getting a big chunk of BIG games. Nova Providence isn't going to get the casual viewers that Indiana Ohio State would...but if the Big East game has a great finish that runs a few minutes into the beginning of the Big 10 game, that viewer may be willing to tune in next time Providence plays, instead of going with the FSU Clemson game on ESPN that everyone knows will be a woofer.
This.
I mentioned "move the needle" programs as a criterion, that doesn't mean I have any obvious ones to offer at this point. I mentioned UCONN and Gonzaga as a possible two who may be the most obvious at this point; they seem to be kicked around here the most. The idea here involves the scenario where the BE waits to see what happens with football, notwithstanding your valid point/example of Wake and Vandy.
Perhaps Val and Delaney put together the BE/B1G deal with your thought in mind, especially given the nexus involved between the conferences and Fox.
The bottom line is that the BE is not likely to expand for the foreseeable future.
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