MullinMayhem wrote:At SJ we have competitive grad programs but our ranking will always suffer academically due to our mission of bringing in a bunch of 1st generation college students. Good mission, but will always hurt the rankings being fairly unselective for undergrad.
AAC is expected to move first on any additional expansion because it lost three valuable pieces and is down to only eight members. If it loses two more members, the AAC's automatic qualification status for the NCAA Tournament could be impacted. Sources also tell CBS Sports that ESPN could rework its media rights deal with the AAC at a lower price due to a membership composition clause in their contract.
Sources say the clause could be activated if the AAC lost UConn, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF. UConn left the AAC entirely in 2020, becoming an independent in football while joining the Big East for basketball and other sports.
AAC commissioner Mike Aresco is not worried about a reworking of the deal, persons close to those discussions tell CBS Sports. Aresco has been telling constituents that he hopes to keep the value of the conference's media rights payout equal to what it was before Cincinnati, Houston and UCF left for the Big 12. AAC schools are paid approximately $7 million annually as part of a deal signed in 2019 with ESPN.
ArmyVet wrote:AAC is looking to expand.
https://www.cbssports.com/college-footb ... alignment/AAC is expected to move first on any additional expansion because it lost three valuable pieces and is down to only eight members. If it loses two more members, the AAC's automatic qualification status for the NCAA Tournament could be impacted. Sources also tell CBS Sports that ESPN could rework its media rights deal with the AAC at a lower price due to a membership composition clause in their contract.
Sources say the clause could be activated if the AAC lost UConn, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF. UConn left the AAC entirely in 2020, becoming an independent in football while joining the Big East for basketball and other sports.
AAC commissioner Mike Aresco is not worried about a reworking of the deal, persons close to those discussions tell CBS Sports. Aresco has been telling constituents that he hopes to keep the value of the conference's media rights payout equal to what it was before Cincinnati, Houston and UCF left for the Big 12. AAC schools are paid approximately $7 million annually as part of a deal signed in 2019 with ESPN.
AAC is expected to move first on any additional expansion because it lost three valuable pieces and is down to only eight members. If it loses two more members, the AAC's automatic qualification status for the NCAA Tournament could be impacted. Sources also tell CBS Sports that ESPN could rework its media rights deal with the AAC at a lower price due to a membership composition clause in their contract. Sources say the clause could be activated if the AAC lost UConn, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF.
Django wrote:
What will the new espn deal be and when would they rework the deal?
Husky_U wrote:
So Aresco and the AAC are going after Boise, San Diego State, Colorado State, and Air Force, but should that western pod decline, it's UAB, FAU, UTSA, and Rice...
Django wrote:So if the B12 stays in the P5, are Temple, USF (Big East) and SMU (Southwest) the only 3 remaining teams in the G5 that at one time were in a major conference? Then fell off?
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