GoldenWarrior11 wrote:
http://www.foxsports.com/college-football/story/25-lgbt-groups-send-letter-to-big-12-urging-it-to-shun-byu-080816
BYU's candidacy into the Big 12 took a hit today. The Big 12 is dealing with enough headaches with Baylor as it currently stands - I'm not sure if the Big 12 Presidents would want to deal with an added migraine dealing with this issue.
If BYU gets snubbed, a Cincinnati/Houston combination jumps into the lead.
The Big 12’s TV partners are pushing back on the conference’s plans to expand.
ESPN and Fox Sports believe that expansion with schools from outside the power five conferences will water down the Big 12 and make it less valuable, not more, sources said. But the Big 12 is financially motivated to add more teams. A clause in the conference’s media deals stipulate that if the Big 12 expands, it would receive pro rata increases in its rights fees.
The original deals pay $2.6 billion over 13 years, or about $20 million per school annually. Expansion by two schools, theoretically, would force ESPN and Fox combined to pay an additional $40 million per year in rights fees. Expansion by four teams could mean another $80 million per year.
Both networks, according to sources, are digging their heels in against paying those kinds of increases based on expansion with schools outside the power five.
That kind of cash grab, sources say, is rubbing ESPN and Fox the wrong way because any new schools would not carry the profile of most power five schools, which is what the networks are paying for.
Network officials are not happy with any plan that depends on steep rights-fee increases, even if such increases are spelled out in the media contracts.
Several options are being considered at the networks’ headquarters.
ESPN and Fox could negotiate smaller rights-fee increases as opposed to the pro rata increases.
If the networks, both of which have encountered some financial challenges in the last year with cutbacks and subscriber losses, decided to staunchly challenge the contracts, they could simply not pay the increases and force the conference to take them to court. ESPN and Fox would argue that the move to expand and charge the TV networks more money does not reflect the spirit of the original deals, which were signed four years ago. The conference, of course, can fall back on its contracts, which spell out pro rata increases.
DMN’s Chuck Carlton reports that no one has the eight votes necessary to expand. That can change on a dime and I’d imagine that there will be some horse trading, you vote for this team, I’ll vote for your team. Apparently it is Houston, Cincinnati and BYU in the lead, with the idea of a football only addition is unlikely and “nobody wants it”.
The groundswell of support for the University of Houston’s bid to join the Big 12 Conference seemed to come out of nowhere.
For two decades, the Cougars' major athletic conference dreams seemed hopeless. Then on July 21, Governor Greg Abbott declared on Twitter that Big 12 expansion was a “non-starter” without UH. Within hours, more state politicians, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, and leaders of other Texas Big 12 schools were voicing their support, too.
The show of support for UH was surprising and impressive. But it didn’t materialize from nothing. The university's most powerful supporters have urged state leaders to back their bid for months. Aware that college sports and politics are inextricably linked in Texas, university boosters have used friendly political allies, face-to-face lobbying, and campaign contributions to make their case. It seems to be working.
The UH PAC, which is known for aggressively pursuing the university’s interests, has been key. Wilson said the group identified Big 12 membership as one of its top priorities about two years ago. Ever since, its leaders have lobbied more than 50 lawmakers to support their bid. The group has the power of the purse behind it. According to campaign finance records, it has made more than $800,000 worth of political expenditures since 2012.
Perhaps even more important, the UH System’s billionaire board chairman has made his own push. Tilman Fertitta, who owns numerous chain restaurants and casinos, is a powerful figure in the state, having donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Texas politicians, including more than $350,000 to Governor Greg Abbott.
A decision will likely come in the next few months, with two or four teams added. Or the conference may choose not to expand. Fox and ESPN are reportedly opposed to expansion, and could pressure the conference to stay at 10 teams.
Odds on who joins Big 12 next (via http://SportsBettingDime.com )
BYU 5/3
UH 5/2
Cincinnati 5/2
UCF 3/1
Memphis 7/1
UConn 8/1
Col St 8/1
USF 10/1
cu blujs wrote:
Thought I had read that BYU policies prohibit all pre-marital or extra marital sex, not just LGBT.
Homosexual behavior is inappropriate and violates the Honor Code. Homosexual behavior includes not only sexual relations between members of the same sex, but all forms of physical intimacy that give expression to homosexual feelings.
sciencejay wrote:Just thought I'd add this: While Colorado State isn't on anyone's short list for B12 expansion, they are busting their arses to get into the P5. New stadium on campus (opens in 2017). New football-only facilities (academic center, training center, training table). They argue that they bring the Denver and northern Colorado market which exceeds 4 million (I think). CU from the Pac12 argues that CSU doesn't bring that big of a market, but they are in-state rivals--can't say I know. Interestingly, in light of the recent posts, one of their main arguments for inclusion was as a travel partner for BYU who obviously is/was a leading candidate.
sciencejay wrote:When I was a kid, Ft. Collins was a ways north of the Denver metro area. Now, they are contiguous. You are right that CU in Boulder is closer to the bulk of the metro area, but Ft. Collins just isn't that much farther. CSU's student population is now ~5,000 more than CU's. Anyway, I'm not arguing that CSU really does bring the Denver market. My point was that that's what CSU is arguing (of course they would), and they are investing massive amounts of $$ into their facilities, etc. to give themselves a shot at the prize (P5 membership). They very well could end up like UConn--investing a ton of money into a program that hemorrhages it out the back side.
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