Bill Marsh wrote:I don't know about you guys, but I never watch Big Ten games. I have enough trouble keeping up with Big East games and still having a life. I assume that Big Ten fans are the same with regard to their league. So, I don"t know why the move of 50 Big Ten games to Fox is going to turn Big Ten fans into Big East watchers. Big Ten fans are still going to watch Big Ten games regardless of who broadcasts them.
sciencejay wrote:FriarJ wrote:
Yep all of us that watched a conference expand itself right out of existence know nothing... All you johnny come lately geniuses have it all figured out. Numbnuts.scoscox wrote:
Your brand of progress is exactly what lead to the OBE's collapse in the first place. Strange that you would try to flip it on its head.
I am grateful to know that the ONLY reason the OBE collapsed is that it added teams. There was no conflict with football vs. non-football schools. Sounds like revisionist history. Unfortunately for the B1G, ACC, SEC and Pac, they are all destined to a ruinous end like the OBE was. They've all expanded in the past few years. Earlier I said there was a paradigm shift going on in college athletics, but it's even bigger than I feared--the whole system is about to collapse!
GTMO-Take heart that we have these experienced stewards of conference success in our corner, protecting us from ourselves. And we're the numbnuts. (Mic drop)
billyjack wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:I don't know about you guys, but I never watch Big Ten games. I have enough trouble keeping up with Big East games and still having a life. I assume that Big Ten fans are the same with regard to their league. So, I don"t know why the move of 50 Big Ten games to Fox is going to turn Big Ten fans into Big East watchers. Big Ten fans are still going to watch Big Ten games regardless of who broadcasts them.
Hey Bill, I'm like you in that watching Big East games consumes most of my sports-viewing hours in the winter. But the only conference i won't watch is the ACC cuz they're a-holes. I often will keep a Pac-12 FS1 game on late on a weeknight while I'm doing some other activity, work or whatever.
I think the key with Big Ten games on FS1 is to continue to build FS1 into typical fans' channel surfing rotations.
Xudash wrote:
1. Fox BE Media Agreement
Does the true-up provision still exist? .
paulxu wrote:Xudash wrote:
1. Fox BE Media Agreement
Does the true-up provision still exist? .
If it was in the original agreement as generally was accepted, I would think it would not suddenly be dropped.
The provision (as I remember) was to allow for expansion to 12 with all 12 getting the same amount as the original 10.
That would indicate both parties knew there was a possibility to add 2 teams over the life of the agreement, and wanted no dilution.
Who might those have been (in their minds) at formation, let alone now?
Beats me. I would not think it was any of the usual suspects, like some members of the A10 are thought to be, or WSU.
What would be the point of waiting? The demographics won't change on those schools, only perhaps their improvement on the court.
Why not just included them from the get-go. Are they waiting for SLU to get better to get that potential large market?
it would seem more likely that the expansion clause for 2 teams with no dilution was a forward looking preparation for 2 candidates whose "situation" might change that it would be acceptable to the 10 members. Maybe that was a ND, or a Connecticut without FBS football, or a Gonzaga plus one.
Bill Marsh wrote:billyjack wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:I don't know about you guys, but I never watch Big Ten games. I have enough trouble keeping up with Big East games and still having a life. I assume that Big Ten fans are the same with regard to their league. So, I don"t know why the move of 50 Big Ten games to Fox is going to turn Big Ten fans into Big East watchers. Big Ten fans are still going to watch Big Ten games regardless of who broadcasts them.
Hey Bill, I'm like you in that watching Big East games consumes most of my sports-viewing hours in the winter. But the only conference i won't watch is the ACC cuz they're a-holes. I often will keep a Pac-12 FS1 game on late on a weeknight while I'm doing some other activity, work or whatever.
I think the key with Big Ten games on FS1 is to continue to build FS1 into typical fans' channel surfing rotations.
Yes, Billy Jack, I too hope that bringing more eyes to FS1 and FS2 will boost Big East ratings.
My take on it is that the challenge the Big East faces is that it's just hard for a smaller conference of relatively small colleges to attract the viewership to command the kind of dollars that will be necessary to compete going forward. Ignoring the problem or denying that it exists, as some here are prone to do, will not make it go away. The conference leadership needs to have a plan to improve the ratings drastically in spite of the limitations on enrollment and alumni.
Back in the early days of the conference and the early days of ESPN, the viewing public was used getting the "game of the week". Then "Big Monday" was added to the weekend lineup. Fans didn't expect their school to be on TV. If a conference had compelling drama like Ewing, Mullin, etc, that could draw a big audience. Patrick was a generational player who was at Georgetown for 4 years. They were a threat to win the national championship every year with him there. It was "must-see-TV". That was a rare opportunity that fueled the Big East's meteoric rise. We don't have 4 year players of Patrick's caliber any more. And the number of cable networks has exploded, so fans can be much more selective in what they watch. The Big Ten and its ilk with enrollments of 40-50,000 and a comparable alumni base have an enormous advantage. What the Big East has done is miraculous under those circumstances. I don't know if it will be enough.
"Expansion" is a solution begging for a problem to solve. It is only one option. Val talks about "growing the brand". I truly don't know what that means. It sounds like marketing-speak. Hopefully an honest discussion of the problem and it's challenges has been taking place at HQ.
Schools like, Providence, St John's, Xavier, and Creighton will always have a local fan base beyond just their immediate college community for a variety of reasons. Marquette has done a magnificent job in a challenging environment. But the rest of the conference members have lots of competition in their markets and have a harder time building numbers that kind of culture.
I don't have the answers. I have to think that expansion with the right additions will eventually be part of a successful strategy, but I think it has to be more than that. I hope the brain trust does have the solution.
paulxu wrote:Xudash wrote:
1. Fox BE Media Agreement
Does the true-up provision still exist? .
If it was in the original agreement as generally was accepted, I would think it would not suddenly be dropped.
The provision (as I remember) was to allow for expansion to 12 with all 12 getting the same amount as the original 10.
That would indicate both parties knew there was a possibility to add 2 teams over the life of the agreement, and wanted no dilution.
Who might those have been (in their minds) at formation, let alone now?
Beats me. I would not think it was any of the usual suspects, like some members of the A10 are thought to be, or WSU.
What would be the point of waiting? The demographics won't change on those schools, only perhaps their improvement on the court.
Why not just included them from the get-go. Are they waiting for SLU to get better to get that potential large market?
it would seem more likely that the expansion clause for 2 teams with no dilution was a forward looking preparation for 2 candidates whose "situation" might change that it would be acceptable to the 10 members. Maybe that was a ND, or a Connecticut without FBS football, or a Gonzaga plus one.
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