hawkoooo wrote:Meaning that the 100 million was dependent upon teams 11 and 12 being SLU and UD?
Hall2012 wrote:hawkoooo wrote:Meaning that the 100 million was dependent upon teams 11 and 12 being SLU and UD?
Yeah that doesn't make sense.
The way I understood it was they would essentially add on equal shares for each school added up to 2. So with UConn joining, they'll get their media rights share without diluting everyone else's. I'm no expert and could obviously be wrong, but it seems to make sense.
NEW YORK (AP) — The breakaway basketball schools kept the Big East name and the conference tournament in Madison Square Garden. In return, they left behind tens of millions of dollars to the football members. That was easy to do with a lucrative television contract awaiting.
The new Big East launched as a 10-member league Wednesday with the additions of Butler, Creighton and Xavier and a 12-year deal with Fox. The agreement is worth about $500 million with the possibility of increasing to $600 million were the league to add more members, according to a person with knowledge of the details. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the value of the agreement was not made public.
gtmoBlue wrote:See Jet915's post earlier in this thread.
According to at least the source in his post, our current contract grossly undervalues actual BE output over these last 6 years.
This new window offers the opportunity to renegotiate for optimal increase(s) in media compensation.
Upticks in the overall compensation package, fine tuning content outputs, plus taking into consideration the new inputs of UConn content.
Could fuel significant increases in Conference and per school compensation.
Of schools which are available and considered fits...UConn and Gonzaga are the 2 which move the money needle.
adoraz wrote:Yeah that post was pretty reassuring, but I'm a bit skeptical given the lack of a strong source. I figured that Fox might have overpaid for us to start their network, but if we've been worth more than our contract then that'd be incredible. We should find out soon once our contract is revisited.
Associated Press journalist Rachael Cohen wrote:
The agreement is worth about $500 million with the possibility of increasing to $600 million were the league to add more members, according to a person with knowledge of the details.
adoraz wrote:
I don't think it really matters what the contract says as I'm sure it's being renegotiated right now. That clause was meant to give the Big East flexibility if we needed to add a St. Louis or Dayton. Fox will look to extend our contract, and in the process everyone will earn more money. UConn is likely the only addition that will add money per school.
gtmoBlue wrote:
This new window offers the opportunity to renegotiate for optimal increase(s) in media compensation.
Upticks in the overall compensation package, fine tuning content outputs, plus taking into consideration the new inputs of UConn content.
Could fuel significant increases in Conference and per school compensation.
Say hello to ACCN, as in the ACC Network, an ESPN-owned cable channel that goes on-air in August, 2019. ESPN’s main broadcast campus in Bristol, Connecticut, will be headquarters for ACCN. The main draw will be live sports — 1,300 games and events annually — featuring the 15 schools in the Greensboro-based conference.
McCollum and her co-workers have 9,000 hours a year to fill with ACC games and related programming.
Big Ten Network, owned by Fox Sports and the conference, started in 2007 and is based in Chicago. SEC Network, like ACCN an ESPN-owned channel, followed in 2014. SEC Network is located in Charlotte as part of ESPN’s 38,000-square-foot offices and studios in Ballantyne. Big Ten and SEC Network each have distribution in the range of 60 million homes, with SEC Network slightly ahead.
Big Ten schools receive $50 million each from media rights and other shared revenue, including the dedicated network, while the SEC stands at $43 million. In 2016-17, the most recent data available for ACC revenue, each school received less than $30 million.
After years of broadcasting games across a myriad of television channels and separate networks, the Ivy League will partner with ESPN to concentrate over 1,100 events across 30 sports on a single platform. The deal, announced on April 4, will run for 10 years starting this fall and should completely revamp the Ivy League sports fan experience.
Now, for just $4.99 per month, viewers can watch almost every Ivy League sporting event. At least 24 major events will be live on an ESPN primary network over the course of the 2018-2019 academic calendar, and all the rest can be found on the platform that made this deal possible, ESPN+.
ESPN+ is where the subscription comes in—for less than $60 per year it gives access to not only the Ivy League, but also MLB, NHL and MLS games, Grand Slam tennis, Top Rank boxing, PGA Tour golf, additional college sports, international rugby, cricket, varied analysis programming, and the full library of ESPN Films. It launched on April 12 as part of an ESPN App and espn.com redesign and gained over a million subscribers in its first five months.
A major upside of this deal for both sides, Harris noted, is the introduction of new markets.
“[Subscribers] are getting more content besides the Ivy League. And our games show up when you look for other games—they're right by US Open Tennis, they're right by the Power 5 football games, they're right by Major League Baseball and NHL games,” Harris said. “So the opportunity for a more casual fan to say, 'Hey, Princeton and Columbia are playing, let me watch this game' has gone up exponentially.”
The exposure for a rapidly improving brand was just as key. The deal with ESPN seems to be coming at the perfect time for an athletic conference more than ready to make a national impression.
Dartmouth College • Hanover, New Hampshire
Boston College • Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Harvard University • Cambridge, Massachusetts
Brown University • Providence, Rhode Island
Yale University • New Haven, Connecticut
Columbia University • New York City, New York
Syracuse University • Syracuse, New York
Cornell University • Ithaca, New York
Princeton University • Princeton, New Jersey
University of Pennsylvania • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
University of Louisville • Louisville, Kentucky
University of Notre Dame • Notre Dame, Indiana
The main statutes are the Sherman Act of 1890, the Clayton Act of 1914 and the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914. These Acts, first, restrict the formation of cartels and prohibit other collusive practices regarded as being in restraint of trade. Second, they restrict the mergers and acquisitions of organizations that could substantially lessen competition. Third, they prohibit the creation of a monopoly and the abuse of monopoly power.
herodotus wrote:Speaking of the Bona poster, this is going to be the opposite of what he's been suggesting. Instead of bringing in a cupcake to give the middling teams wins, we're bringing in a school that is going to pimp smack the teams in the bottom half of the league. With the 20 game schedule giving teams only 11 games to build up their record, this is likely to result in somebody becoming a real doormat, and not just DePaul. Of course, this depends on UConn becoming a beast again, but 20 games is a lot, and someone is going to have to swallow those losses.
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