Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worry about the Stanford and Cal athletic departments. They both, especially Stanford, play a large number of sports. Both have also had major financial issues in the last decade. I wonder how things will play out less money for so long.
Yes, having been in the Bay Area and on/near Stanford's campus for most of the last decade, I'm shocked they still have the same AD. They tried to cut several sports unsuccessfully and have seen their football and basketball teams struggle. That is usually a recipe for a leadership change.
The cut of those sports was not real. It was a plan to get alums to pony money up which they did.
Anonymous wrote:It would be interesting if Notre Dame now moved to the Big Ten Conference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worry about the Stanford and Cal athletic departments. They both, especially Stanford, play a large number of sports. Both have also had major financial issues in the last decade. I wonder how things will play out less money for so long.
Yes, having been in the Bay Area and on/near Stanford's campus for most of the last decade, I'm shocked they still have the same AD. They tried to cut several sports unsuccessfully and have seen their football and basketball teams struggle. That is usually a recipe for a leadership change.
Anonymous wrote:This move will strengthen the GOR. The agreement is what the agreement is and the law is what the law is but the addition of three new teams signing up will push any equities away from programs leaving unless they give notice now. And they cannot. There has been some reporting that USC opposes Clemson coming into the SEC ad they will do all they can to veto that.
Anonymous wrote:Any source regarding which team (allegedly NC State) flipped ? (The twitter source cited above is bs as one must wade through dozens of twitter posts to try to find the relevant post--if it exists.)
Anonymous wrote:I worry about the Stanford and Cal athletic departments. They both, especially Stanford, play a large number of sports. Both have also had major financial issues in the last decade. I wonder how things will play out less money for so long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of the articles that I have read claim that the ACC Presidents vote for expansion was unanimous--so I wonder which school or schools flipped. My best guess is that Clemson flipped as possible SEC membership would be unlikely due to opposition from in-state rival Univ. of South Carolina--but, this is pure speculation.
NC State flipped
Anonymous wrote:I worry about the Stanford and Cal athletic departments. They both, especially Stanford, play a large number of sports. Both have also had major financial issues in the last decade. I wonder how things will play out less money for so long.
Anonymous wrote:12-3 vote with NC State flipping.
https://twitter.com/PeteThamel?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SMU, CAL, & STANFORD to become new ACC members.
SMU will receive no TV revenue for 9 years.
Cal & Stanford will start by receiving 30% shares each.
https://cbssports.com/college-football/news/acc-votes-to-add-stanford-cal-smu-conference-presidents-approve-expansion-to-18-schools/
I hope SMU got the pledges from donors vowing to support the athletic department in writing. I wonder what non-revenue sports will get cut at Stanford and Cal once the athletics department realizing how much travel will cost
I suspect that SMU donors and supporters did it even better than in writing by giving assurances in cash.
8 years is a long ways away. Unless they paid all of it up front, it's going to be interesting to see how long they are willing to fly mens soccer across the county now that they have what they want with football. Unlike most schools, SMU doesn't even pretend to care about other sports. Here's there athletic department's landing page https://smumustangs.com/