Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If ND, Cal, and Stanford joined the ACC -- the ND schedule
Stanford
Cal
Miami
BC
GTech
Clemson
Duke - for the win
Wake - for the win
Navy
USC
They would do this.
Every rival is 3 time zones away, except for each other. It doesn’t work. Why do you think the Big aren’t added Washington and Oregon. I expect the Big Ten to eventually include Stanford and Berkeley, simply to anppease its west coast participants.
Not that big of a deal and that is what we are moving to. either 2, 3, or 4 national conferences. I doubt 4. Most likely 2 SEC and Big10 but possibly ACC if they could do it right. The move to national conferences is happening. Indeed it is why an ACC/SEC merger is not far fetched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If ND, Cal, and Stanford joined the ACC -- the ND schedule
Stanford
Cal
Miami
BC
GTech
Clemson
Duke - for the win
Wake - for the win
Navy
USC
They would do this.
Every rival is 3 time zones away, except for each other. It doesn’t work. Why do you think the Big aren’t added Washington and Oregon. I expect the Big Ten to eventually include Stanford and Berkeley, simply to anppease its west coast participants.
Anonymous wrote:If ND, Cal, and Stanford joined the ACC -- the ND schedule
Stanford
Cal
Miami
BC
GTech
Clemson
Duke - for the win
Wake - for the win
Navy
USC
They would do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If ND, Cal, and Stanford joined the ACC -- the ND schedule
Stanford
Cal
Miami
BC
GTech
Clemson
Duke - for the win
Wake - for the win
Navy
USC
They would do this.
Every rival is 3 time zones away, except for each other. It doesn’t work. Why do you think the Big aren’t added Washington and Oregon. I expect the Big Ten to eventually include Stanford and Berkeley, simply to anppease its west coast participants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even if Stanford University offered to join the Big Ten Conference at a 50% payout forever, there is no value to the Big Ten Conference. Stanford's football value is in its rivalry relationship with Notre Dame.
Maybe Stanford could try being an independent for a year or two rather than dropping its football program, but there just do not appear to be any other economically viable options for Stanford football. And Cal football is in a worse position than Stanford football.
Stanford because they are Stanford would not take anything less than a full payout. Anything less damages the overall brand.
Anonymous wrote:If ND, Cal, and Stanford joined the ACC -- the ND schedule
Stanford
Cal
Miami
BC
GTech
Clemson
Duke - for the win
Wake - for the win
Navy
USC
They would do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame can remain as an independent because Notre Dame football draws viewers regardless of the opponent.
Stanford & Cal football cannot even generate excitement among their own respective student bodies.
(The US Military Academy at West Point is also an independent in D-1 college football.)
If the big conferences all go to a 10 game schedule, there won't be anyone for Navy to play other than second tier competition and the service academies...and I guess Stanford and Cal.
Anonymous wrote:Even if Stanford University offered to join the Big Ten Conference at a 50% payout forever, there is no value to the Big Ten Conference. Stanford's football value is in its rivalry relationship with Notre Dame.
Maybe Stanford could try being an independent for a year or two rather than dropping its football program, but there just do not appear to be any other economically viable options for Stanford football. And Cal football is in a worse position than Stanford football.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ACC is loaded with strong academic schools. Granted that Stanford & UCal-Berkeley are exceptional, but many ACC schools are outstanding with respect to academics.
Delusional. Stanford and Cal are several academic levels above all ACC schools. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, etc.. aren't even close.
What I don't understand is that Stanford and Cal are loaded in endowment, those schools can reach into the fund to support the athletic department without any issues. They have so many "rich" alumni there. One would imagine that 30M/year is a drop in the bucket for Doordash CEO Tony Xu or Stanford Jerry Yang. Stanford and Cal don't need to join the ACC to get that kind of cash.
Stanford yes on above others. Cal not so much. UVA, UNC, Miami, BC, Wake all Cal level. No one in the Pac 12 was near Cal either. Closest was UCLA and Cal.
Schools will not -- not a one -- tap endowment for sports. It will never happen except for that part of the endowment that is for sports. And no there is no pool of alums at any school willing to guarantee 30 million a year. This is all fantasy.
30M a year is just so little for many of the Silicon Valley Alumni that graduated from Stanford or Cal. I am sure it can be easily done. Larry Page made 8B in 2022 so 30M is .375% of his earnings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the Big 12 actually in a great place? None of their new additions are wonderful. Their deal isn't amazing. They are fine for a few years but I wouldn't bet on the Big 12 looking like it does now in 10 years.
They are safe. There is real parity and they have a shot at the CFB. At the same time, there are no teams head and shoulder above the rest clamoring to get out which gives them stability that the Pac12 and ACC lacked.
Anonymous wrote:Is the Big 12 actually in a great place? None of their new additions are wonderful. Their deal isn't amazing. They are fine for a few years but I wouldn't bet on the Big 12 looking like it does now in 10 years.