ChelseaFriar wrote:NJRedman wrote:DudeAnon wrote:I think most of you are missing the point. I don't think lacking football would be our downfall but rather the fact that we are a conference of private schools. I think we got lucky with FS1 launching exactly when we formed and they payed a premium for content. Currently we all operate with basketball budgets on par with P5 programs. We will see if that continues after next TV contract.
If we keep winning national titles they will.
Only if the national titles lead to better conference game ratings, right? That's my biggest concern. Smaller alumni bases and a lack of state following, in some cases, can lead to less eyeballs on the TV.
XtoDC wrote:stever20 wrote:I think you folks are insane if you think football 20 years from now won't be the most popular sport.
I mean in high schools- there are over a million kids that play HS football. It's over 500k more than any other HS sport for boys. I'm sorry- but that just isn't changing in 20 years. It would take frankly generations for it to change to not be the most popular sport(looking at the last 2 years data- 2013-14- had 1.093 million boys playing football- 2014-15 had 1.083 million boys playing- so only 10k fewer boys playing football). Oh, and another interesting factoid. The # of boys HS athletes in 2014-15 dropped by about 8,682 kids.
http://www.nfhs.org/ParticipationStatis ... esults.pdf
Yeah! It's not like a high school with 800 boys has more than 13 kids tryout for basketball and needs to make cuts, unlike football that can basically keep as many as they want. Nope, that has nothing to do with those statistics. Time for some of you to take your blinders off and start dealing in facts!
stever20 wrote:but here's the thing. football isn't hurting for numbers, and those kids that are playing football are going to remain fans most likely for good.
It's going to take a MASSIVE change for football to get even remotely close to #2. MUCH longer than 20 years. Folks here don't want to acknowledge how far football is ahead of any other sport in America. It's NFL, then College Football, then everything else. Top rated 15 sports events so far this year- only Cle/GS game 7 is not a football game. Considering that there have only been like 10 college football games and 15 NFL slots, that's pretty tough. And a HUGE part of that frankly- gambling and fantasy. That's not going away any time soon.
stever20 wrote:The thing is, CTE has been going on for a while now. It's been a whopping 5+ years since Duerson died. Junior Seau died 4+ years ago now.
The number in 2011-12 when things started to come out was 1.095 million boys playing HS football. So with everything that's come out, in 3 years it's dropped by 12k boys. That's pretty negligible. (last years data not out yet).
I seriously doubt ANY FBS program will drop football. see what happened at UAB a few years ago.
And yes, Jet said that in 20 years, football won't be the most popular sport. I'm sorry- but that is pretty moronic. Football would need to have it's participation cut in half. I'm sorry- but that just isn't going to happen. And folks even if they don't let their kids play football will still be football fans.
Regarding the question- we really haven't seen the impact of the new money for the SEC or Big Ten yet at all. Lets see the years where those 2 conferences are getting 50+ million dollars per school per year- and then lets see the impact at that point. And the ACC isn't going anywhere either and will be up over 40 million dollars per school per year. Plus all 3 have or will have dedicated networks.
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