On July 30, 2021 MullinMayhem wrote:
With how aggressive everyone else is getting, we need to add Gonzaga and figure out logistics after. This day in age with enough $ and branding, you just figure it out. The days of conf names making sense geographically are long gone. This is about survival. If the big football conferences keep going in this direction, they're having their own NCAAT as well just without the NCAA, since they will leave. It won't make sense because many watch for Cinderella potential and intrigue, but they would still have enough viewers to make good $. It becomes much harder to push the Big East aside from a tournament like that if you add Gonzaga to Nova, UConn, etc.
Mark Few is an American college basketball coach who has been the head coach at Gonzaga University since 1999. He has served on Gonzaga's coaching staff since 1989, and has been a constant on the sidelines throughout a period that has seen the Bulldogs rise from mid-major obscurity to consistent NCAA Tournament contenders. During his tenure as head coach, Few has led the Bulldogs to the NCAA Tournament every season (except 2019–20, when the team had secured an automatic bid but the tournament was cancelled), a stretch that has garnered the Bulldogs recognition as a major basketball power despite playing in a mid-major conference.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I hate to break it to the board, but there are considerable barriers for Gonzaga ever becoming a member in the Big East without a full western pod to compliment it. First and foremost, the Big East is an East coast, NYC-centered, basketball conference. If Gonzaga were located in Cleveland, they would have been added a decade ago easily. However, even with our $4-$5 million payouts annually, it makes zero financial sense to add Gonzaga as a full-member (which NCAA laws require, as your basketball home is your home for all sports). Gonzaga cannot be added as a men's basketball-only member. For Gonzaga, being in the WCC does not prevent them from competing for national championships. Their donations are at an all-time high. There is zero incentive for them to join an East Coast league, one that would require annual trips to Newark, New York City, Washington D.C., Storrs and Philadelphia (let alone the other Midwestern states).
Secondly, all of these moves being made (and soon to be made) are all for football, first and foremost. The cold harsh reality that Kansas, a blue blood basketball program, is not going to be picked up by the B1G, ACC or PAC, speaks volumes to where the pecking order of realignment falls. The C7 have very intimate knowledge of this. Every single move is because of football. Because of that, there is no move to make right now. The Big East doesn't need to because it does not affect its standing in the basketball hierarchy, and the Big East continues to be treated as a peer to the power conferences.
Thirdly, for all conferences, a school has to provide value to the league if their top sport suddenly crumbles and is no longer nationally relevant. What value would Gonzaga offer to the Big East if they lost Few and hired a coach that tanked the program? What would happen if they underwent a long rebuild? What value would our programs have traveling in all-sports to Spokane annually if it wasn't a strong matchup? Think like a University President, not a college basketball fan.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I hate to break it to the board, but there are considerable barriers for Gonzaga ever becoming a member in the Big East without a full western pod to compliment it. First and foremost, the Big East is an East coast, NYC-centered, basketball conference. If Gonzaga were located in Cleveland, they would have been added a decade ago easily. However, even with our $4-$5 million payouts annually, it makes zero financial sense to add Gonzaga as a full-member (which NCAA laws require, as your basketball home is your home for all sports). Gonzaga cannot be added as a men's basketball-only member. For Gonzaga, being in the WCC does not prevent them from competing for national championships. Their donations are at an all-time high. There is zero incentive for them to join an East Coast league, one that would require annual trips to Newark, New York City, Washington D.C., Storrs and Philadelphia (let alone the other Midwestern states).
Secondly, all of these moves being made (and soon to be made) are all for football, first and foremost. The cold harsh reality that Kansas, a blue blood basketball program, is not going to be picked up by the B1G, ACC or PAC, speaks volumes to where the pecking order of realignment falls. The C7 have very intimate knowledge of this. Every single move is because of football. Because of that, there is no move to make right now. The Big East doesn't need to because it does not affect its standing in the basketball hierarchy, and the Big East continues to be treated as a peer to the power conferences.
Thirdly, for all conferences, a school has to provide value to the league if their top sport suddenly crumbles and is no longer nationally relevant. What value would Gonzaga offer to the Big East if they lost Few and hired a coach that tanked the program? What would happen if they underwent a long rebuild? What value would our programs have traveling in all-sports to Spokane annually if it wasn't a strong matchup? Think like a University President, not a college basketball fan.
DeltaV wrote:^ what X said. We should make no moves which would devalue the conference and brand. If there were any additions that would increase our value, we already would have taken them, or would have added them when we picked up UConn.
If realignment rattles a few things free, and they're willing to put football on the back burner, then sure. But until then, we sit and wait.
ESPN's broadcast dominance of college football
Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith is perhaps the most powerful athletic director in the country and a former member of the CFP committee. Smith’s point is tied, in part, to potential changes in the fundamental structure of conferences and overall college athletics. Essentially, it's difficult to determine access when there’s little certainty as to what leagues will look like. There’s also NCAA governance issues, as it’s uncertain what the collegiate leadership model will look like in two years.
Other leaders around the country have expressed a skepticism toward the financial value of allowing ESPN to continue to be the sole owner of the most powerful rights in college football. The College Football Playoff is, essentially, a television contract with ESPN that runs through the 2025 season. ESPN owns all of it now, which includes three playoff games and other New Year’s six bowls.
Right now, ESPN has exclusive negotiating rights because it owns the contract. The idea of bringing those rights to open market has only increased around the sport now that ESPN rode shotgun on the bold and expensive move of Texas and Oklahoma leaving the Big 12 for the SEC. (The Big 12 was mad enough in the wake of losing its two alpha members that it sent ESPN a “cease and desist” letter and alleging in an interview that ESPN “provided incentives” for another league to “destabilize” the Big 12. ESPN denied this.)
The acquisitions of OU and Texas fortifies SEC as the dominant brand in the sport, as it owns the SEC Network and all of the SEC’s relevant television rights starting in the summer of 2024. (ESPN also runs the ACC Network and owns the conference's rights through 2036, but that deal is widely viewed as so lopsided toward ESPN that it’s an impediment for the league’s future.)
The notion among many leaders around the sport: Why allow ESPN access to the most valuable set of rights around the sport without other bidders to drive up the price?
How ESPN's domination of CFP could cost conferences in long run
It’s not uncommon among major professional sports, like the NFL and NBA, to have multiple networks broadcast their postseason. Also, that would take perhaps an additional half billion of ESPN’s dollars a year off the table that could theoretically be directed toward upcoming rights to leagues like the upcoming deals of the Big Ten (2023) and Pac-12 (2024).
“It’s behooves everyone not named the SEC and ACC [for the CFP rights to go to market],” said a Power 5 athletic director outside the Big Ten. “It’s in all of our best interest [of other leagues] to let the contract through and go to open market. Why would a streaming service want to bid on a league like the Big Ten or Pac-12 to carry the regular season if they are going to just hand it over to ESPN for the playoffs?”
The discomfort around the country with ESPN owning the entire playoff sets up the stakes for an undercurrent that will define the next iteration of conference realignment and the next generation of college sports — the ESPN and the SEC vs. Fox and everyone else. The biggest unknown in the TV market is if another traditional suitor (CBS, NBC) or streaming service will join Fox Sports in the fray.
On July 26, 2021 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
COLLEGE FOOTBALL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS IN NCAA DIVISION I FBS – Wikipedia
TABLE 4: Niche's 2021 Best Colleges in America - SCHOOL RANKINGS
Niche Rank • Niche Grade • School • Conference • Niche Net Price
11 • A+ • Vanderbilt Commodores • Southeastern • $25,855
23 • A+ • MICHIGAN WOLVERINES • BIG TEN • $17,357
56 • A+ • Florida Gators • Southeastern • $10,457
57 • A+ • TEXAS LONGHORNS • BIG 12 • $15,502
59 • A+ • Georgia Bulldogs • Southeastern • $15,961
80 • A+ • Texas A&M Aggies • Southeastern • $19,237
92 • A+ • OHIO STATE BUCKEYES • BIG TEN • $18,706
94 • A • FLORIDA STATE SEMINOLES • ACC • $12,568
99 • A • CLEMSON TIGERS • ACC • $21,482
134 • A • Auburn Tigers • Southeastern • $23,562
153 • Southeastern Conference - Average Niche Ranking for Present 14 Schools
156 • A • OKLAHOMA SOONERS • BIG 12 • $21,804
161 • A • South Carolina Gamecocks • Southeastern • $21,787
164 • A • Alabama Crimson Tide • Southeastern • $20,623
167 • A- • Mississippi State Bulldogs • Southeastern • $16,471
175 • A- • Missouri Tigers • Southeastern • $15,850
182 • A- • Arkansas Razorbacks • Southeastern • $16,263
201 • A- • Ole Miss Rebels • Southeastern • $14,672
223 • A- • Tennessee Volunteers • Southeastern • $21,024
241 • A- • LSU Tigers • Southeastern • $18,143
283 • B+ • Kentucky Wildcats • Southeastern • $18,958
The boards at Texas and Oklahoma voted Friday to officially accept membership in the SEC
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:.
Bold Predictions: Ohio State will move to the SEC - Meredith Hein, SB Nation/LandGrantHolyLand - July 28, 2021
Texas, Oklahoma join SEC: Longhorns, Sooners accept invitations as Big 12 powers begin new wave of realignment – CBS Sports – July 30, 2021The boards at Texas and Oklahoma voted Friday to officially accept membership in the SEC
Niche Rank • Niche Grade • School • Conference • Niche Net Price
110 • A • TCU Horned Frogs • Big 12 • $37,509
137 • A • Baylor Bears • Big 12 • $28,372
148 • A • Iowa State Cyclones • Big 12 • $15,195
160 • A • Oklahoma State Cowboys • Big 12 • $15,325
165 • A • Kansas State Wildcats • Big 12 • $18,103
179 • A- • Texas Tech Red Raiders • Big 12 • $16,463
193 • A- • Kansas Jayhawks • Big 12 • $19,195
276 • A- • West Virginia Mountaineers • Big 12 • $12,743
66 • A+ • Tulane Green Wave • American Athletic • $40,783
86 • A+ • SMU Mustangs • American Athletic • $40,404
118 • A • South Florida Bulls • American Athletic • $9,787
124 • A • Tulsa Golden Hurricane • American Athletic • $23,940
149 • A • UCF Knights • American Athletic • $11,617
171 • A- • Cincinnati Bearcats • American Athletic • $19,219
200 • A- • Temple Owls • American Athletic • $23,032
212 • A- • Houston Cougars • American Athletic • $13,212
523 • B • Memphis Tigers • American Athletic • $13,481
529 • B • East Carolina Pirates • American Athletic • $13,635
835 • B- • Wichita State Shockers • American Athletic • $13,849
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