GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Regardless of what the annual payouts are, we know for certain that the Big East received a 12-year, $500 million deal (averages out to $4.16 million per year of the deal) and that the American received a 7-year, $126 million deal (averages out to around $1.5 million per year of the deal). Obviously, the American receives CFP money annually (last year the American received a total of $20.26 million, between UCF's NY6 appearance and the revenue shared amoung the G5). That adds $1.68 million annually. The Big East earns more in tournament credits, and will continue to do so over the next few years (due to the lack of success from the American in March).
ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Regardless of what the annual payouts are, we know for certain that the Big East received a 12-year, $500 million deal (averages out to $4.16 million per year of the deal) and that the American received a 7-year, $126 million deal (averages out to around $1.5 million per year of the deal). Obviously, the American receives CFP money annually (last year the American received a total of $20.26 million, between UCF's NY6 appearance and the revenue shared amoung the G5). That adds $1.68 million annually. The Big East earns more in tournament credits, and will continue to do so over the next few years (due to the lack of success from the American in March).
The math is only part of the equation.
The AAC's inaugural deal traded dollars for exposure. They gambled on themselves and their ability to draw ratings.
A similar approach was taken with the original Big East deal with ESPN. They just wanted to secure the television time and the opportunity to show that they are a ratings draw.
When the old Big East folded, it opened up a lot of television windows on the WWL. Aresco's strategy was to capitalize on the innate value of those windows to build their brand.
It was essentially the new Big East deal in reverse, in which FS1 paid more because it was a fledgling network and the content providers were taking on the bigger risk.
Now the AAC is using an established ratings history in their (re)negotiation with ESPN this year.
ArmyVet wrote:ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Regardless of what the annual payouts are, we know for certain that the Big East received a 12-year, $500 million deal (averages out to $4.16 million per year of the deal) and that the American received a 7-year, $126 million deal (averages out to around $1.5 million per year of the deal). Obviously, the American receives CFP money annually (last year the American received a total of $20.26 million, between UCF's NY6 appearance and the revenue shared amoung the G5). That adds $1.68 million annually. The Big East earns more in tournament credits, and will continue to do so over the next few years (due to the lack of success from the American in March).
The math is only part of the equation.
The AAC's inaugural deal traded dollars for exposure. They gambled on themselves and their ability to draw ratings.
A similar approach was taken with the original Big East deal with ESPN. They just wanted to secure the television time and the opportunity to show that they are a ratings draw.
When the old Big East folded, it opened up a lot of television windows on the WWL. Aresco's strategy was to capitalize on the innate value of those windows to build their brand.
It was essentially the new Big East deal in reverse, in which FS1 paid more because it was a fledgling network and the content providers were taking on the bigger risk.
Now the AAC is using an established ratings history in their (re)negotiation with ESPN this year.
It seems like AAC fans want to rewrite history. If they traded dollars for exposure, what exposure exactly has the AAC gained? Other than UCF, I can't think of a school who has benefitted or outperformed any realistic expectations.
ArmyVet wrote:ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Regardless of what the annual payouts are, we know for certain that the Big East received a 12-year, $500 million deal (averages out to $4.16 million per year of the deal) and that the American received a 7-year, $126 million deal (averages out to around $1.5 million per year of the deal). Obviously, the American receives CFP money annually (last year the American received a total of $20.26 million, between UCF's NY6 appearance and the revenue shared amoung the G5). That adds $1.68 million annually. The Big East earns more in tournament credits, and will continue to do so over the next few years (due to the lack of success from the American in March).
The math is only part of the equation.
The AAC's inaugural deal traded dollars for exposure. They gambled on themselves and their ability to draw ratings.
A similar approach was taken with the original Big East deal with ESPN. They just wanted to secure the television time and the opportunity to show that they are a ratings draw.
When the old Big East folded, it opened up a lot of television windows on the WWL. Aresco's strategy was to capitalize on the innate value of those windows to build their brand.
It was essentially the new Big East deal in reverse, in which FS1 paid more because it was a fledgling network and the content providers were taking on the bigger risk.
Now the AAC is using an established ratings history in their (re)negotiation with ESPN this year.
It seems like AAC fans want to rewrite history. If they traded dollars for exposure, what exposure exactly has the AAC gained? Other than UCF, I can't think of a school who has benefitted or outperformed any realistic expectations.
ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:ArmyVet wrote:ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:It seems like AAC fans want to rewrite history. If they traded dollars for exposure, what exposure exactly has the AAC gained? Other than UCF, I can't think of a school who has benefitted or outperformed any realistic expectations.
It's not rewriting history.
The AAC Championship is going to be on ABC this weekend. Last March, the AAC got the B1G's CBS slot for its MBB tournament.
If they weren't drawing, they wouldn't get those prime windows.
With all the other major FB conferences locked up in deals, ESPN is currently the only network they can negotiate with. It's to ESPN's advantage to strike a deal before they go to open market.
ProprietyofLeyluken wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Regardless of what the annual payouts are, we know for certain that the Big East received a 12-year, $500 million deal (averages out to $4.16 million per year of the deal) and that the American received a 7-year, $126 million deal (averages out to around $1.5 million per year of the deal). Obviously, the American receives CFP money annually (last year the American received a total of $20.26 million, between UCF's NY6 appearance and the revenue shared amoung the G5). That adds $1.68 million annually. The Big East earns more in tournament credits, and will continue to do so over the next few years (due to the lack of success from the American in March).
The math is only part of the equation.
The AAC's inaugural deal traded dollars for exposure. They gambled on themselves and their ability to draw ratings.
A similar approach was taken with the original Big East deal with ESPN. They just wanted to secure the television time and the opportunity to show that they are a ratings draw.
When the old Big East folded, it opened up a lot of television windows on the WWL. Aresco's strategy was to capitalize on the innate value of those windows to build their brand.
It was essentially the new Big East deal in reverse, in which FS1 paid more because it was a fledgling network and the content providers were taking on the bigger risk.
Now the AAC is using an established ratings history in their (re)negotiation with ESPN this year.
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