Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
College and University Discussion
Reply to "College Football--Big Ten Expansion"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Nevertheless, I do support the consideration of Stanford University for Big Ten Conference membership. After all, Northwestern University needs a buddy in the conference with which it can identify. And I love Northwestern University, but hazing that involves any manner of humiliation is totally inappropriate. I want the Big Ten Conference to grow to 24 teams composed of 4 six team divisions. The addition of UCal Berkeley & Stanford would make such an arrangement easy, but it would also make a future split from the conference easy. So no to the addition of BOTH Stanford & Cal-Berkeley. Both are attractive from an academic viewpoint, but neither is at the level of a Notre Dame with respect to football--the premier revenue sport. But, hey, if Notre Dame wants Stanford, then Stanford it is.[/quote] My brother - an NCAA D1 All American in his day and a very well known economist - has colleagues at Cal's econ department. His Cal friend - who is a sports fan, is now legitimately concerned about the future of Cal athletics given the environment at the university. [b]Their choices are bleak. Beg for a space with the Big 10[/b] with a promise of a fuller revenue share in the future, join the Mountain West at a paltry 4 million a year and compete against Boise State, or go independent. Notre Dame altogether hauls in $33M being independent. Cal (and Stanford for that matter) could only draw a fraction of that sum and I don't see independence working for Cal or Stanford. Playing San Jose State draws minimal revenue. Stanford has the best overall women's athletic program in country. Query how that basketball and softball and golf and swim teams - and I could go on - will be paid for without big football money. This shuffle is so profound it is going to impact the schools in any number of ways. A university president now really must really understand sports and the media markets, particularly as regards football which drives everything. Academic nerds cannot survive. The shuffle causes me to lose interest. Really, who is going to be interested in watching a 500 Maryland squad play Washington in November (no knock on Washington, but an unknown to people who live here)? As a kid we drove to Michigan games from Chicago. There was reason to get excited watching Michigan play Purdue (or name your school). A relative lived down the street from FSU's ex-head coach, who the athletic department is still paying after buying out his contract to terminate him. They took money from the capital fund for the buyout. The reality is that FSU cannot sit and watch Florida get $40M more each year than FSU by virtue of SEC membership. They want in the SEC - and who in the heck knows how Florida State would pay the enormous ACC exit fee and restore its grant of rights back to itself. But you can bet FSU will pull every string and work every legislator 6 blocks away (4 blocks if you include the law school) to find a way to unhook from the ACC. The trustees care more about football than anything else. I ran on the FSU campus as an old guy a few years back and the stadium has stained glass of Bobby Bowden as if it was a fancy church. The new med school is three blocks north and you can't even find it easily. FSU could demand an unequal ACC draw (along with Clemson) but to get competitive with the SEC and Big 10 the draw would have to be significantly imbalanced in FSU's direction. And frankly, although better last year the team has not been good enough the past several years to support an unequal draw. It is unfortunate that sports - football - will so impact universities. NIL essentially means de facto pro teams. But there is no going back. [/quote] Regarding the bolded: Don't bother. May work for Stanford IF Notre Dame does the begging, but ND is a bit clueless as to the realities of today.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics