GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I am utterly shocked (even more so than by last summer's Texas/Oklahoma news to the SEC). I have long thought that a BIG-PAC raid was inevitable, but I always thought that it would come after an ACC raid; alas, to quote Bob Dylan, "The Times They Are A-Changin'". The B1G (and the SEC) are not done. More consolidation will occur, and the Mega 2 will continue to increase television revenues and exclusivity. The Big Ten is certainly on the phone right now with Oregon, Washington, Stanford and California as well, with Arizona and Colorado on Line-2. They will look to create a Western Division, with an endgame of probably ~24 schools broken into a few divisions/pods. Heck, the B1G Championship might inevitably become the Rose Bowl Game itself, whose champion could face off against the Sugar Bowl Champion in the new Division 1 Championship Game (host to be determined/bid-on). If you don't think Notre Dame will want to join this exclusive national high academic/athletic conference, under a similar ACC-type arrangement, guess again.
The SEC will patiently wait to gobble-up the left-overs from the ACC, also moving to ~24 teams as well. I'd imagine they'll seek North Carolina, Florida State, Clemson, Georgia Tech, NC State, Virginia Tech.
As to the Big East, now more than ever, I am incredibly confident that we will get a Kansas, a Syracuse, etc. to complete the league for the next decade.
gtmoBlue wrote:My friend Adoraz thinks we're fine. Yes, for now. However, basketball is an afterthought. Football is the driver behind all this activity and football money...not basketball. Let's not get overconfident here.
gtmoBlue wrote:Sooo. SC/UCLA to the B1G is the death knell to college football? The MLB/Nascar move to kill the sport?
Gee, thanks for the info guys. So Cincinnati soccer it is!
Xudash wrote:gtmoBlue wrote:Sooo. SC/UCLA to the B1G is the death knell to college football? The MLB/Nascar move to kill the sport?
Gee, thanks for the info guys. So Cincinnati soccer it is!
Ha! So allow me to semi-retract and refine a little, especially given adoraz's good points:
1. Baseball may be healthy overall, but I still think we can agree that there is a great deal of financial imbalance in professional baseball, and, again, that is due to how revenue is handled in the league (i.e. the bigger markets benefit in this category). There is a reason that a proud franchise like the Cincinnati Reds has been down for so long. That and a solid dose of front office ineptitude perhaps. Even if the Reds organization somehow became God's gift to finding exceptional young talent, the franchise does not have the purse strings to compete against the major market teams; it's in no position to RETAIN a sufficient amount of talent that would enable it to build and hold onto a series-worthy roster. Mike Brown down the street does not have that problem with his NFL franchise and revenue sharing arrangement with the NFL.
sju88grad wrote:I have season tickets for LAFC here in LA and if given the choice of an LAFC or a Dodger game, I'm taking LAFC without any hesitation.....but that's just me.....
gtmoBlue wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:I am utterly shocked (even more so than by last summer's Texas/Oklahoma news to the SEC). I have long thought that a BIG-PAC raid was inevitable, but I always thought that it would come after an ACC raid; alas, to quote Bob Dylan, "The Times They Are A-Changin'". The B1G (and the SEC) are not done. More consolidation will occur, and the Mega 2 will continue to increase television revenues and exclusivity. The Big Ten is certainly on the phone right now with Oregon, Washington, Stanford and California as well, with Arizona and Colorado on Line-2. They will look to create a Western Division, with an endgame of probably ~24 schools broken into a few divisions/pods. Heck, the B1G Championship might inevitably become the Rose Bowl Game itself, whose champion could face off against the Sugar Bowl Champion in the new Division 1 Championship Game (host to be determined/bid-on). If you don't think Notre Dame will want to join this exclusive national high academic/athletic conference, under a similar ACC-type arrangement, guess again.
The SEC will patiently wait to gobble-up the left-overs from the ACC, also moving to ~24 teams as well. I'd imagine they'll seek North Carolina, Florida State, Clemson, Georgia Tech, NC State, Virginia Tech.
As to the Big East, now more than ever, I am incredibly confident that we will get a Kansas, a Syracuse, etc. to complete the league for the next decade.
I too expected the ACC to be raided 1st. oh well. Nice well developed rant on B1G football though.
As to Notre Dame: The golden domers will decline. The B1G wants ND - all in. No ACC-type arrangements. Why give up the best football seat in the house...only to become another Nebraska in the B1G? ND plays a national schedule, not regional as conferences do. They make plenty of money with NBC, they don't have to share. They make their own decisions - not compromising with 15-20 other schools - none of which have any common interests or love, for Notre Dame. There is a century of bad blood btwn the Big 10 and ND...ND hasn't lost their minds nor the memories. With all of this newfound promotion, ND will seek-and get-more money from NBC. They will stay with the ACC, for the time being, and watch the landscape. Smart move. Should the ACC implode, then make moves as necessary. Notre Dame has a trump card. US. They can stay indy and park all other sports back here in the BE.
Jet wants to backfill with lesser schools - now. No amigo...patience. Better new members lie just ahead. Patience.
God forbid we would take Kansas, for any reason. Cheating ass S'cuse...I can accept (due to history, Bayheim's last 10 years of comments/antiACC rhetoric). S'cuse, Duke, ND to get to 14. If SHTF we can possibly go to 16 or 18 with better schools than SLU, Dayton, VCU, etc.
My friend Adoraz thinks we're fine. Yes, for now. However, basketball is an afterthought. Football is the driver behind all this activity and football money...not basketball. Let's not get overconfident here.
ND has a trump card. They stay indy...and if necessary, move their non-football sports to the Big East.
adoraz wrote:
Yeah that's a very valid point. MLB, more than any other sport, allows for teams with higher revenue to set whatever salary they want. It's still very possible for medium or sometimes smaller market teams to win the World Series (such as my Braves last year), but it's becoming less common. Teams like the Yankees and Dodgers are constantly at the top of their divisions and that's getting boring. I'm sure MLB's reasoning is when those teams are in the playoffs it produces higher TV ratings, but I'm not sure if that's good for the game long-term or not. Probably will lose some fans, but it's been going on for a while now so it's hard to say what impact it has had. Fans in smaller markets do seem to return when their teams are good, but the NFL's equal model may be better/healthier long-term.
Savannah Jay wrote:adoraz wrote:
Yeah that's a very valid point. MLB, more than any other sport, allows for teams with higher revenue to set whatever salary they want. It's still very possible for medium or sometimes smaller market teams to win the World Series (such as my Braves last year), but it's becoming less common. Teams like the Yankees and Dodgers are constantly at the top of their divisions and that's getting boring. I'm sure MLB's reasoning is when those teams are in the playoffs it produces higher TV ratings, but I'm not sure if that's good for the game long-term or not. Probably will lose some fans, but it's been going on for a while now so it's hard to say what impact it has had. Fans in smaller markets do seem to return when their teams are good, but the NFL's equal model may be better/healthier long-term.
Agree with your overall sentiment about baseball but the Braves are one of baseball's "haves." IN 2021, they had revenues of $443M and trailed only the Dodgers, Yankees, and Red Sox (and are one sport above the Cubs). Aside from their media deal, the Braves own all of those business around the battery and that has infused some serious income into the formerly mid-market Braves. I even read that after the World Series, Braves revenue was more like $568M.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/193645/revenue-of-major-league-baseball-teams-in-2010/
But the inequity in baseball is killing it (well, that and 4 hour games). My 5 kids don't care about baseball. They think it's boring and takes too long. They'll go to a game (when daddy's buying!) but they don't watch it on TV (unless the Braves or Cubs are in the playoffs...then maybe).
The great franchises of the sports past (Reds, Pirates, Orioles, to name a few) have almost no chance to compete. Why watch regular season games when the end conclusion is mostly known?
On the other hand, who had the Rams and Bengals picked to play in the Super Bowl before last season started?
adoraz wrote:Savannah Jay wrote:adoraz wrote:
Yeah that's a very valid point. MLB, more than any other sport, allows for teams with higher revenue to set whatever salary they want. It's still very possible for medium or sometimes smaller market teams to win the World Series (such as my Braves last year), but it's becoming less common. Teams like the Yankees and Dodgers are constantly at the top of their divisions and that's getting boring. I'm sure MLB's reasoning is when those teams are in the playoffs it produces higher TV ratings, but I'm not sure if that's good for the game long-term or not. Probably will lose some fans, but it's been going on for a while now so it's hard to say what impact it has had. Fans in smaller markets do seem to return when their teams are good, but the NFL's equal model may be better/healthier long-term.
Agree with your overall sentiment about baseball but the Braves are one of baseball's "haves." IN 2021, they had revenues of $443M and trailed only the Dodgers, Yankees, and Red Sox (and are one sport above the Cubs). Aside from their media deal, the Braves own all of those business around the battery and that has infused some serious income into the formerly mid-market Braves. I even read that after the World Series, Braves revenue was more like $568M.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/193645/revenue-of-major-league-baseball-teams-in-2010/
But the inequity in baseball is killing it (well, that and 4 hour games). My 5 kids don't care about baseball. They think it's boring and takes too long. They'll go to a game (when daddy's buying!) but they don't watch it on TV (unless the Braves or Cubs are in the playoffs...then maybe).
The great franchises of the sports past (Reds, Pirates, Orioles, to name a few) have almost no chance to compete. Why watch regular season games when the end conclusion is mostly known?
On the other hand, who had the Rams and Bengals picked to play in the Super Bowl before last season started?
That's true the Braves do earn a lot in revenue, but unlike most teams they don't reflect that in their payroll. This year, after their WS win, they are #9 (/30) in MLB in overall payroll (highest they've been in a very long time). Last year they were #11, so they won it all with a payroll just above average. In 2020 they were #16, which is what they've typically been at during the 21st century. I do agree there are a lot of teams like the Orioles that unfortunately have no chance at competing. I'm in favor of a salary cap and have been for a while to improve competition, though I'm not convinced the current set-up is detrimental for the game from a business standpoint.
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