Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Xudash wrote:
Look at this from a business point of view. It's a slam dunk.
I agree. A look from a business point of view necessarily entails a look at financial information – specifically, annual revenue and profit/loss.
Big East TV Contract: ($ 500 million) / (12 years) / (10 schools) = $ 4.17 million per-year, per-school
UConn's subsidizing of athletics jumps as other revenues sag – May 18, 2016The per-year, per-school average of the television contracts for the P5 leagues runs from $14.6 million (SEC) to $20.7 million (Big Ten). The Big 12 has a per-year, per-school average of $20 million in television revenue. What the Huskies generate via television rights, less than $2 million per year, is a pittance in comparison.
The financial impact of championship basketball – April 6, 2016Data that UConn submitted to the U.S. Department of Education shows that for the 2014-2015 academic year, UConn's men's basketball team, which has won the national title four times since 1999, cost UConn $8.6 million while it earned $9.6 million in revenue – a profit of $ 1.3 million. Expenses for the school's lower-profile football team were $ 14.2 million, which overshadowed its $ 8.3 million in revenue – a loss of $ 5.9 million.
With a 2015 Revenue of $ 9.6 million and a 2015 Profit of $ 1.3 million, UConn did not make the Forbes list of College Basketball's 20 Most Valuable Teams. Please note that in the excerpt below, I have intentionally omitted Team Values, as Forbes’ valuation methodology has not been disclosed.
College Basketball's 20 Most Valuable Teams - 2016 - Forbes - March 14, 2016)
paulxu wrote:I remember this guy from a few years ago when the big shakeup and re-formation of the league occurred.
But I wonder if Conn sends a proposal to the Big12 that includes a football-only admission, and the rest of their programs to the BE, wouldn't they get clearance from the BE before doing that?
http://www.centralctcommunications.com/ ... ce2f4.html
paulxu wrote:I remember this guy from a few years ago when the big shakeup and re-formation of the league occurred.
But I wonder if Conn sends a proposal to the Big12 that includes a football-only admission, and the rest of their programs to the BE, wouldn't they get clearance from the BE before doing that?
http://www.centralctcommunications.com/ ... ce2f4.html
Bill Marsh wrote:It's hard to believe that UConn would have any value to the Big 12 as a football-only. And it's hard to believe that the people at UConn would think it would.
The other factor that this rumor ignores is the leverage that a Big 12 invite would give UConn with the ACC and B1G. With the B1G offer in hand, they could give the othe 2 leagues a "last chance" shot at them. UConn must be aware of the various options they have in negotiations with the P5 leagues. A football-only membership wouldn't give them any leverage.
BEX wrote:
A10's deal signed in 2012 with espn, nbc and cbs for 40 million over 8 yrs. or about 350k per team.
The financial details of the deal have not been disclosed. Also yet to be released is how the money will be divvied up among conference members.
For the first time in school history, every University of Dayton men's basketball regular season game will be televised during the 2015-16 campaign.
The Flyers will play a school-record 21 contests on national television in 2015-16, matching last year's total. Dayton will play eight games on the ESPN family of networks, eight on CBS Sports Network, three on NBC Sports Network, and two on the American Sports Network.
A total of at least seven games will air on Time Warner Cable SportsChannel in Ohio and one on FOX Sports Ohio.
Sources close to the deal say that the Atlantic 10 conference will earn $40 million over the eight years, or split $5 million a season.
$5 million per year, split between 14 teams means each school will get a little more than $350,000 per year from the television contract.
By comparison, NBC Sports is reportedly prepared to offer the Big East basketball members as much as $4 million per year as part of a larger deal to get the rights to both football and basketball. Are schools like Georgetown, Marquette, and St. John's bigger and more valuable basketball properties than St. Louis, Butler and others in the A-10? Sure.Nevertheless, there's no conceivable collection of basketball schools, without football also being a part of the equation, that would be able to command a number that large. Basketball just doesn't earn the money that football does, no matter how you arrange the conference.
Even the ACC television deal, which pays each school an average of $17 million per year, is divided 80% for football and 20% for basketball, meaning that a basketball only contract that featured two of the sports' most valuable brands (Duke and North Carolina) would hypothetically only earn about $3.5 million per team per year for its television rights.
paulxu wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:It's hard to believe that UConn would have any value to the Big 12 as a football-only. And it's hard to believe that the people at UConn would think it would.
The other factor that this rumor ignores is the leverage that a Big 12 invite would give UConn with the ACC and B1G. With the B1G offer in hand, they could give the othe 2 leagues a "last chance" shot at them. UConn must be aware of the various options they have in negotiations with the P5 leagues. A football-only membership wouldn't give them any leverage.
Perhaps the value would be the East Coast TV market without having to saddle all their other sports with travel requirements to Connecticut.
The leverage idea makes sense, but I'm more interested in whether the BE would have Ok'd their potential admission as an 11th team in advance, so their Big 12 pitch would have validity.
BEX wrote:Gopher+RamFan wrote:MuddyWaters,
What is Dayton's media rights deal?
Thanks.
Deal signed in 2012 with espn, Nbc and Cbs for 40 million over 8 yrs. or about 350k per team.
Bill Marsh wrote:
Excellent post. Thanks for all the data. Great look at the business side.
Among the schools outside the Power-5 conferences (and Notre Dame), Connecticut has far and away the largest athletic budget. According to USA Today’s annual research, UConn’s 2014-15 athletic budget was $72 million. The next highest total on the list was Cincinnati’s, $52 million.
Brigham Young is not on the list but BYU’s reported athletic budget is $57 million per year. UConn, with football attendance about half of BYU’s, spends more than do the Cougars. That’s impressive. UConn’s commitment to big-time athletics is unassailable.
Here are the USA Today figures of the top 20 non-Power-5 schools, with athletic budget and school subsidy. The subsidy gives you an idea how much revenue the departments generate (by subtracting) but also give you an idea how much the school is committed to athletic success.
1. Connecticut $72 million ($28M subsidy)
2. Cincinnati $52 million ($23M subsidy)
3. Central Florida $51 million ($24M subsidy)
4. Air Force $50 million ($34M subsidy)
5. San Diego State $49 million ($23M subsidy)
6. East Carolina $48 million ($18M subsidy)
7. South Florida $45 million ($21M subsidy)
8. Nevada-Las Vegas $45 million ($19M subsidy)
9. James Madison $44 million ($35M subsidy)
10. Houston $44 million ($25M subsidy)
11. Old Dominion $43 million ($28M subsidy)
12. Boise State $43 million ($12M subsidy)
13. Memphis $43 million ($18M subsidy)
14. Hawaii $43 million ($17M subsidy)
15. New Mexico $42 million ($11M subsidy)
16. Army $41 million ($12M subsidy)
17. Fresno State $39 million ($14M subsidy)
18. Colorado State $38 million ($20M subsidy)
19. Massachusetts $36 million ($28M subsidy)
20. Wyoming $35 million ($15M subsidy)
Also on the list, and mentioned as requesting audiences with the Big 12, are Arkansas State ($29 million budget; $14 million subsidy) and Northern Illinois ($27 million budget, $17 million subsidy). Totals for BYU, Tulane, Temple and SMU were not listed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Houston is the overwhelming pick to repeat as American Athletic Conference champions. UConn was ranked fourth in the six-team East Division. When all of the teams in the 12-team conference are ranked by the number of points they received in the poll, UConn comes in eighth.
Bill Marsh wrote:
The real dollars that these university presidents are after is research dollars, which dwarf the revenue generated by athletics.
Bill Marsh wrote:
Universities want to associate with others like themselves, or what they'd like to be. That's what drives these realignment decisions even more than football as we have seen even with the new Big East.
Providence, Georgetown, St. John's, Villanova, Marquette, Seton Hall and DePaul broke away from the old conference in search of stability, which was badly lacking as the football members kept leaving for other leagues. They feel they've found kindred spirits in Butler, Creighton and Xavier, all private schools with fewer than 8,000 students.
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