Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Big Ten will not add anybody until they integrate and figure out UCLA and USC. The only schools that would fit and increase the massive payouts per school are Texas, Florida or Florida State, Notre Dame. That’s it. The B1G has locked down the major markets outside those and are rolling teams and games through major markets with huge Big Ten alumni bases. Any other addition will lose money for member schools. Now if the league could jettison Purdue, Michigan State and Northwestern there would be 3 spots open for Washington, Oregon and one of Arizona/Colorado or UNC.
Never happen--nor should it happen.
2022 average regular season viewership for each of the 8 schools (plus a few more) listed by the previous poster quoted above:
University of Oregon = 2,221,000 viewers average
Michigan State = 1,910,000 viewers average
Univ. of Washington = 1,150,000 viewers avg.
Northwestern University = 1,130,000 viewership average (and during a horrible 1-11 season)
Purdue = 870,000 avg. viewership
UNC = 849,000 avg. viewership (almost identical to Stanford number & to Syracuse))
U. Arizona = 506,000 avg. viewership
U. Colorado = 353,000 average viewership (also a horrible 1-11 season if I recall correctly)
Big Ten's Rutgers--NYC market--was at 618,000 avg. viewers
Univ. of Miami = 608,000 viewers avg.
Indicates that the University of Oregon is an attractive target school based on viewership numbers.
Anonymous wrote:The Big Ten will not add anybody until they integrate and figure out UCLA and USC. The only schools that would fit and increase the massive payouts per school are Texas, Florida or Florida State, Notre Dame. That’s it. The B1G has locked down the major markets outside those and are rolling teams and games through major markets with huge Big Ten alumni bases. Any other addition will lose money for member schools. Now if the league could jettison Purdue, Michigan State and Northwestern there would be 3 spots open for Washington, Oregon and one of Arizona/Colorado or UNC.
Anonymous wrote:The Big Ten will not add anybody until they integrate and figure out UCLA and USC. The only schools that would fit and increase the massive payouts per school are Texas, Florida or Florida State, Notre Dame. That’s it. The B1G has locked down the major markets outside those and are rolling teams and games through major markets with huge Big Ten alumni bases. Any other addition will lose money for member schools. Now if the league could jettison Purdue, Michigan State and Northwestern there would be 3 spots open for Washington, Oregon and one of Arizona/Colorado or UNC.
Anonymous wrote:Indiana University has a great undergraduate business school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to highjack this thread, but Texas moving to the SEC is huge. "The UT athletic department is a self-sustaining operation. No public money is used for any aspect of UT athletics.'' And in total, specific to the football program, the University of Texas has $41.8 million in expenses (quite a budget) but $146.8 million in football revenue. And that profit of almost $105 million is the financial foundation for all other programs in the athletic department.
There are quite a few self sustaining athletic departments. That’s not unusual at all.
Can you post the self sustaining departments?
The schools getting the fat TV contracts through their leagues have self-sustaining Athletic departments. UT is not unique.
What is your definition of "unique"? There are only 22 self sustaining football programs the participate in D1 athletics. That is less than 10 percent of D1 public institutions.
These are the 22 schools who turned a profit in the athletic department without having to rely on student fees or other forms of support from the university (including government funds):
School
Total revenue
Generated revenue
Allocated revenue
Total expenses
Difference
Oregon
$122,394,483
$119,709,341
$2,685,142
$77,856,232
$41,853,109*
Alabama
$130,542,153
$125,562,153
$4,980,000
$98,961,214
$26,600,939
Penn State
$106,614,724
$106,614,724
$0
$88,041,921
$18,572,803
Michigan
$106,874,031
$106,640,861
$233,170
$89,133,850
$17,507,011
Oklahoma State
$106,362,128
$100,708,922
$5,653,206
$83,748,207
$16,960,715
Iowa
$88,735,093
$88,209,386
$525,707
$74,438,196
$13,771,190
Texas
$143,555,354
$143,555,354
$0
$130,436,534
$13,118,820
Oklahoma
$98,512,287
$98,512,287
$0
$87,678,199
$10,834,088
Georgia
$89,735,934
$86,533,389
$3,202,545
$77,250,831
$9,282,558
LSU
$111,030,795
$111,030,795
$0
$102,326,769
$8,704,026
Kansas State
$53,436,790
$50,201,682
$3,235,108
$42,337,682
$7,864,000
Florida
$117,104,407
$112,693,506
$4,410,901
$105,824,376
$6,869,130
Texas A&M
$82,774,133
$82,774,133
$0
$75,941,926
$6,832,207
Arkansas
$78,072,620
$76,377,647
$1,694,973
$71,801,905
$4,575,742
Purdue
$61,653,561
$61,653,561
$0
$58,365,143
$3,288,418
Michigan State
$83,545,892
$83,545,892
$3,348,785
$78,162,447
$2,034,660
Nebraska
$73,483,733
$73,483,733
$0
$71,738,068
$1,745,665
West Virginia
$62,030,104
$57,774,867
$4,255,237
$56,607,917
$1,166,950
Indiana
$69,287,811
$66,905,296
$2,382,515
$65,796,415
$1,108,881
Virginia Tech
$63,613,464
$56,706,913
$6,906,551
$55,738,633
$968,280
Ohio State
$123,174, 176
$123,174, 176
$0
$122,739,754
$434,422
Washington
$64,034,410
$61,851,895
$2,182,515
$61,640,598
$211,297
The chart is courtesy of USA Today.
Some places are, it seems, football factories first, and academic centers second (and barely at that).
Indiana is on that list and is not at all a football factory. It's a place where mediocre football players go to get injured by very, very good football players.
Anonymous wrote:The Big Ten will not add anybody until they integrate and figure out UCLA and USC. The only schools that would fit and increase the massive payouts per school are Texas, Florida or Florida State, Notre Dame. That’s it. The B1G has locked down the major markets outside those and are rolling teams and games through major markets with huge Big Ten alumni bases. Any other addition will lose money for member schools. Now if the league could jettison Purdue, Michigan State and Northwestern there would be 3 spots open for Washington, Oregon and one of Arizona/Colorado or UNC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to highjack this thread, but Texas moving to the SEC is huge. "The UT athletic department is a self-sustaining operation. No public money is used for any aspect of UT athletics.'' And in total, specific to the football program, the University of Texas has $41.8 million in expenses (quite a budget) but $146.8 million in football revenue. And that profit of almost $105 million is the financial foundation for all other programs in the athletic department.
There are quite a few self sustaining athletic departments. That’s not unusual at all.
Can you post the self sustaining departments?
The schools getting the fat TV contracts through their leagues have self-sustaining Athletic departments. UT is not unique.
What is your definition of "unique"? There are only 22 self sustaining football programs the participate in D1 athletics. That is less than 10 percent of D1 public institutions.
These are the 22 schools who turned a profit in the athletic department without having to rely on student fees or other forms of support from the university (including government funds):
School
Total revenue
Generated revenue
Allocated revenue
Total expenses
Difference
Oregon
$122,394,483
$119,709,341
$2,685,142
$77,856,232
$41,853,109*
Alabama
$130,542,153
$125,562,153
$4,980,000
$98,961,214
$26,600,939
Penn State
$106,614,724
$106,614,724
$0
$88,041,921
$18,572,803
Michigan
$106,874,031
$106,640,861
$233,170
$89,133,850
$17,507,011
Oklahoma State
$106,362,128
$100,708,922
$5,653,206
$83,748,207
$16,960,715
Iowa
$88,735,093
$88,209,386
$525,707
$74,438,196
$13,771,190
Texas
$143,555,354
$143,555,354
$0
$130,436,534
$13,118,820
Oklahoma
$98,512,287
$98,512,287
$0
$87,678,199
$10,834,088
Georgia
$89,735,934
$86,533,389
$3,202,545
$77,250,831
$9,282,558
LSU
$111,030,795
$111,030,795
$0
$102,326,769
$8,704,026
Kansas State
$53,436,790
$50,201,682
$3,235,108
$42,337,682
$7,864,000
Florida
$117,104,407
$112,693,506
$4,410,901
$105,824,376
$6,869,130
Texas A&M
$82,774,133
$82,774,133
$0
$75,941,926
$6,832,207
Arkansas
$78,072,620
$76,377,647
$1,694,973
$71,801,905
$4,575,742
Purdue
$61,653,561
$61,653,561
$0
$58,365,143
$3,288,418
Michigan State
$83,545,892
$83,545,892
$3,348,785
$78,162,447
$2,034,660
Nebraska
$73,483,733
$73,483,733
$0
$71,738,068
$1,745,665
West Virginia
$62,030,104
$57,774,867
$4,255,237
$56,607,917
$1,166,950
Indiana
$69,287,811
$66,905,296
$2,382,515
$65,796,415
$1,108,881
Virginia Tech
$63,613,464
$56,706,913
$6,906,551
$55,738,633
$968,280
Ohio State
$123,174, 176
$123,174, 176
$0
$122,739,754
$434,422
Washington
$64,034,410
$61,851,895
$2,182,515
$61,640,598
$211,297
The chart is courtesy of USA Today.
Some places are, it seems, football factories first, and academic centers second (and barely at that).
Anonymous wrote:The Big Ten will not add anybody until they integrate and figure out UCLA and USC. The only schools that would fit and increase the massive payouts per school are Texas, Florida or Florida State, Notre Dame. That’s it. The B1G has locked down the major markets outside those and are rolling teams and games through major markets with huge Big Ten alumni bases. Any other addition will lose money for member schools. Now if the league could jettison Purdue, Michigan State and Northwestern there would be 3 spots open for Washington, Oregon and one of Arizona/Colorado or UNC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to highjack this thread, but Texas moving to the SEC is huge. "The UT athletic department is a self-sustaining operation. No public money is used for any aspect of UT athletics.'' And in total, specific to the football program, the University of Texas has $41.8 million in expenses (quite a budget) but $146.8 million in football revenue. And that profit of almost $105 million is the financial foundation for all other programs in the athletic department.
There are quite a few self sustaining athletic departments. That’s not unusual at all.
Can you post the self sustaining departments?
The schools getting the fat TV contracts through their leagues have self-sustaining Athletic departments. UT is not unique.
What is your definition of "unique"? There are only 22 self sustaining football programs the participate in D1 athletics. That is less than 10 percent of D1 public institutions.
These are the 22 schools who turned a profit in the athletic department without having to rely on student fees or other forms of support from the university (including government funds):
School
Total revenue
Generated revenue
Allocated revenue
Total expenses
Difference
Oregon
$122,394,483
$119,709,341
$2,685,142
$77,856,232
$41,853,109*
Alabama
$130,542,153
$125,562,153
$4,980,000
$98,961,214
$26,600,939
Penn State
$106,614,724
$106,614,724
$0
$88,041,921
$18,572,803
Michigan
$106,874,031
$106,640,861
$233,170
$89,133,850
$17,507,011
Oklahoma State
$106,362,128
$100,708,922
$5,653,206
$83,748,207
$16,960,715
Iowa
$88,735,093
$88,209,386
$525,707
$74,438,196
$13,771,190
Texas
$143,555,354
$143,555,354
$0
$130,436,534
$13,118,820
Oklahoma
$98,512,287
$98,512,287
$0
$87,678,199
$10,834,088
Georgia
$89,735,934
$86,533,389
$3,202,545
$77,250,831
$9,282,558
LSU
$111,030,795
$111,030,795
$0
$102,326,769
$8,704,026
Kansas State
$53,436,790
$50,201,682
$3,235,108
$42,337,682
$7,864,000
Florida
$117,104,407
$112,693,506
$4,410,901
$105,824,376
$6,869,130
Texas A&M
$82,774,133
$82,774,133
$0
$75,941,926
$6,832,207
Arkansas
$78,072,620
$76,377,647
$1,694,973
$71,801,905
$4,575,742
Purdue
$61,653,561
$61,653,561
$0
$58,365,143
$3,288,418
Michigan State
$83,545,892
$83,545,892
$3,348,785
$78,162,447
$2,034,660
Nebraska
$73,483,733
$73,483,733
$0
$71,738,068
$1,745,665
West Virginia
$62,030,104
$57,774,867
$4,255,237
$56,607,917
$1,166,950
Indiana
$69,287,811
$66,905,296
$2,382,515
$65,796,415
$1,108,881
Virginia Tech
$63,613,464
$56,706,913
$6,906,551
$55,738,633
$968,280
Ohio State
$123,174, 176
$123,174, 176
$0
$122,739,754
$434,422
Washington
$64,034,410
$61,851,895
$2,182,515
$61,640,598
$211,297
The chart is courtesy of USA Today.
Some places are, it seems, football factories first, and academic centers second (and barely at that).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to highjack this thread, but Texas moving to the SEC is huge. "The UT athletic department is a self-sustaining operation. No public money is used for any aspect of UT athletics.'' And in total, specific to the football program, the University of Texas has $41.8 million in expenses (quite a budget) but $146.8 million in football revenue. And that profit of almost $105 million is the financial foundation for all other programs in the athletic department.
There are quite a few self sustaining athletic departments. That’s not unusual at all.
Can you post the self sustaining departments?
The schools getting the fat TV contracts through their leagues have self-sustaining Athletic departments. UT is not unique.
What is your definition of "unique"? There are only 22 self sustaining football programs the participate in D1 athletics. That is less than 10 percent of D1 public institutions.
These are the 22 schools who turned a profit in the athletic department without having to rely on student fees or other forms of support from the university (including government funds):
School
Total revenue
Generated revenue
Allocated revenue
Total expenses
Difference
Oregon
$122,394,483
$119,709,341
$2,685,142
$77,856,232
$41,853,109*
Alabama
$130,542,153
$125,562,153
$4,980,000
$98,961,214
$26,600,939
Penn State
$106,614,724
$106,614,724
$0
$88,041,921
$18,572,803
Michigan
$106,874,031
$106,640,861
$233,170
$89,133,850
$17,507,011
Oklahoma State
$106,362,128
$100,708,922
$5,653,206
$83,748,207
$16,960,715
Iowa
$88,735,093
$88,209,386
$525,707
$74,438,196
$13,771,190
Texas
$143,555,354
$143,555,354
$0
$130,436,534
$13,118,820
Oklahoma
$98,512,287
$98,512,287
$0
$87,678,199
$10,834,088
Georgia
$89,735,934
$86,533,389
$3,202,545
$77,250,831
$9,282,558
LSU
$111,030,795
$111,030,795
$0
$102,326,769
$8,704,026
Kansas State
$53,436,790
$50,201,682
$3,235,108
$42,337,682
$7,864,000
Florida
$117,104,407
$112,693,506
$4,410,901
$105,824,376
$6,869,130
Texas A&M
$82,774,133
$82,774,133
$0
$75,941,926
$6,832,207
Arkansas
$78,072,620
$76,377,647
$1,694,973
$71,801,905
$4,575,742
Purdue
$61,653,561
$61,653,561
$0
$58,365,143
$3,288,418
Michigan State
$83,545,892
$83,545,892
$3,348,785
$78,162,447
$2,034,660
Nebraska
$73,483,733
$73,483,733
$0
$71,738,068
$1,745,665
West Virginia
$62,030,104
$57,774,867
$4,255,237
$56,607,917
$1,166,950
Indiana
$69,287,811
$66,905,296
$2,382,515
$65,796,415
$1,108,881
Virginia Tech
$63,613,464
$56,706,913
$6,906,551
$55,738,633
$968,280
Ohio State
$123,174, 176
$123,174, 176
$0
$122,739,754
$434,422
Washington
$64,034,410
$61,851,895
$2,182,515
$61,640,598
$211,297
The chart is courtesy of USA Today.
Some places are, it seems, football factories first, and academic centers second (and barely at that).