It's on!

Patience is a virtue, but I’m not into virtue signaling these days.
Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
Big 12’s “cease & desist” to ESPN claims network contacted other conferences "encouraging” them to take Big 12 schools so Big 12 dissolves, eliminating grant of rights, sources told @Stadium. If Big 12 implodes, ESPN not responsible for final 4 years of deal, worth $1.06 billion
— Brett McMurphy (@Brett_McMurphy) July 28, 2021
Source tells @Stadium Big 12 has advantage in legal dealings w/Texas & OU because "last thing (UT/OU) wants is to have a (university) president, AD or Board or Regents member testifying on stand with their right hand raised"
— Brett McMurphy (@Brett_McMurphy) July 29, 2021
Bruh. I’m screaming 💀 pic.twitter.com/xn3TgVJGZ4
— Sooner4Life (@ThatOneGuy918) July 28, 2021
calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
ColoradoBear said:calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
Fox Sports is a division of Fox Corporation (includes Fox TV Network, TV affiliates across the country, FS1,FS1, etc) which is still has Rupert Murdoch as the largest shareholder.
Sinclair Media bought the Fox Sports Regional Networks, which does not include FS1, FS2 or Fox Network which broadcasts the the p12/B12/BT college tier 1 and 2 football games.
The Big Ten Network is 51% Fox corp, 49% Big Ten Conference and also has nothing to do with Sinclair.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Network
calumnus said:ColoradoBear said:calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
Fox Sports is a division of Fox Corporation (includes Fox TV Network, TV affiliates across the country, FS1,FS1, etc) which is still has Rupert Murdoch as the largest shareholder.
Sinclair Media bought the Fox Sports Regional Networks, which does not include FS1, FS2 or Fox Network which broadcasts the the p12/B12/BT college tier 1 and 2 football games.
The Big Ten Network is 51% Fox corp, 49% Big Ten Conference and also has nothing to do with Sinclair.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Network
Thanks for the clarification. Murdoch's and headquartered in New York. Almost owned by Disney too.
Doesn't matter. Rupert gave up his day to day to his kids who are liberals. Hence, Fox called Arizona for Biden with 2% reporting in the 2020 election.ColoradoBear said:calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
Fox Sports is a division of Fox Corporation (includes Fox TV Network, TV affiliates across the country, FS1,FS1, etc) which is still has Rupert Murdoch as the largest shareholder.
Sinclair Media bought the Fox Sports Regional Networks, which does not include FS1, FS2 or Fox Network which broadcasts the the p12/B12/BT college tier 1 and 2 football games.
The Big Ten Network is 51% Fox corp, 49% Big Ten Conference and also has nothing to do with Sinclair.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Network
BearinOC said:Doesn't matter. Rupert gave up his day to day to his kids who are liberals. Hence, Fox called Arizona for Biden with 2% reporting in the 2020 election.ColoradoBear said:calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
Fox Sports is a division of Fox Corporation (includes Fox TV Network, TV affiliates across the country, FS1,FS1, etc) which is still has Rupert Murdoch as the largest shareholder.
Sinclair Media bought the Fox Sports Regional Networks, which does not include FS1, FS2 or Fox Network which broadcasts the the p12/B12/BT college tier 1 and 2 football games.
The Big Ten Network is 51% Fox corp, 49% Big Ten Conference and also has nothing to do with Sinclair.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Network
BearinOC said:Doesn't matter. Rupert gave up his day to day to his kids who are liberals. Hence, Fox called Arizona for Biden with 2% reporting in the 2020 election.ColoradoBear said:calumnus said:Fyght4Cal said:What? When has ESPN not been capitalist?Goobear said:
ESPN, not exactly a conservative based organization being a capitalist. Oh the irony..
It is interesting that Fox Sports, now owned by right-wing Sinclair Media, is aligned with the B1G and ESPN is owned by Disney (and Hearst) is so firmly behind the red state based SEC. Sinclair is based in Maryland, but Fox Sports is in LA, while Disney is based in LA but ESPN is in Connecticut.
The PAC-12 really screwed up by not making better use of its media connections. Larry Scott was a disaster.
Fox Sports is a division of Fox Corporation (includes Fox TV Network, TV affiliates across the country, FS1,FS1, etc) which is still has Rupert Murdoch as the largest shareholder.
Sinclair Media bought the Fox Sports Regional Networks, which does not include FS1, FS2 or Fox Network which broadcasts the the p12/B12/BT college tier 1 and 2 football games.
The Big Ten Network is 51% Fox corp, 49% Big Ten Conference and also has nothing to do with Sinclair.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Network
LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
I generally agree with you, but the question becomes is the gain of south and midwest audience enough to offset the loss of coastal CA audience, particularly once you factor in typical spending of each population? I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone does. It's an interesting thing to consider though.71Bear said:I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
A guiding principle: never base anything regarding the US as a whole on the observations of people who live in Coastal California. We are an outlier. And, quite frankly, that is why I like living here.
Depends on what you are selling.sketchy9 said:I generally agree with you, but the question becomes is the gain of south and midwest audience enough to offset the loss of coastal CA audience, particularly once you factor in typical spending of each population? I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone does. It's an interesting thing to consider though.71Bear said:I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
A guiding principle: never base anything regarding the US as a whole on the observations of people who live in Coastal California. We are an outlier. And, quite frankly, that is why I like living here.
sketchy9 said:I generally agree with you, but the question becomes is the gain of south and midwest audience enough to offset the loss of coastal CA audience, particularly once you factor in typical spending of each population? I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone does. It's an interesting thing to consider though.71Bear said:I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
A guiding principle: never base anything regarding the US as a whole on the observations of people who live in Coastal California. We are an outlier. And, quite frankly, that is why I like living here.
golden sloth said:
I feel it should be noted that one of the main reasons why college football thrived in certain parts of the country more than others is because they did not have competition from professional sports teams for the local audience. Places like Alabama and Omaha did not have a local nfl team, therefore the local rooting interest was for the college team.
That is the reason why New York, boston, sf, and the other big cities typically dont have passionate local fan bases supporting the college teams. That is why the networks can focus on that 25% rather than the other 75%.
It's much deeper than that. The midwest and the south just have a culture that embraces sports; its almost a religion. Read Friday Night Lights for an example of Texas' love of football. (The Cowboys have been around for years. Other towns with pro sports where college FB thrives: Ohio has the Browns and Bengals;. Detroit Lions in MI. Packers in Wisconsin, Atlanta, Chiefs in MO....)golden sloth said:
I feel it should be noted that one of the main reasons why college football thrived in certain parts of the country more than others is because they did not have competition from professional sports teams for the local audience. Places like Alabama and Omaha did not have a local nfl team, therefore the local rooting interest was for the college team.
That is the reason why New York, boston, sf, and the other big cities typically dont have passionate local fan bases supporting the college teams. That is why the networks can focus on that 25% rather than the other 75%.
Big Dog said:It's much deeper than that. The midwest and the south just have a culture that embraces sports; its almost a religion. Read Friday Night Lights for an example of Texas' love of football. (The Cowboys have been around for years. Other towns with pro sports where college FB thrives: Ohio has the Browns and Bengals;. Detroit Lions in MI. Packers in Wisconsin, Atlanta, Chiefs in MO....)golden sloth said:
I feel it should be noted that one of the main reasons why college football thrived in certain parts of the country more than others is because they did not have competition from professional sports teams for the local audience. Places like Alabama and Omaha did not have a local nfl team, therefore the local rooting interest was for the college team.
That is the reason why New York, boston, sf, and the other big cities typically dont have passionate local fan bases supporting the college teams. That is why the networks can focus on that 25% rather than the other 75%.
Many people on the west coast & NE -- including many Cal students -- believe big time college sports is a waste of money, and hate that athletes "take" admission spots.
Big Dog said:It's much deeper than that. The midwest and the south just have a culture that embraces sports; its almost a religion. Read Friday Night Lights for an example of Texas' love of football. (The Cowboys have been around for years. Other towns with pro sports where college FB thrives: Ohio has the Browns and Bengals;. Detroit Lions in MI. Packers in Wisconsin, Atlanta, Chiefs in MO....)golden sloth said:
I feel it should be noted that one of the main reasons why college football thrived in certain parts of the country more than others is because they did not have competition from professional sports teams for the local audience. Places like Alabama and Omaha did not have a local nfl team, therefore the local rooting interest was for the college team.
That is the reason why New York, boston, sf, and the other big cities typically dont have passionate local fan bases supporting the college teams. That is why the networks can focus on that 25% rather than the other 75%.
Many people on the west coast & NE -- including many Cal students -- believe big time college sports is a waste of money, and hate that athletes "take" admission spots.
Breaking news: Big 12 rule change for this year will award teams 9 points for a TD if school displays “Horns Down” signal after reaching end zone. New rule passed 9-1
— Brett McMurphy (@Brett_McMurphy) July 30, 2021
we can agree to disagree on the reason(s), but I think we both agree that fan passion for college sports on the Left Coast is much less than that in the south (and midwest). And that is the big reason why the P12 network was always a pipe dream. Common sense would say that it would never work. Larry sold the Uni Presidents on a pig in a poke while trying to earn himself millions (to be paid like a media mogul).BearForce2 said:Big Dog said:It's much deeper than that. The midwest and the south just have a culture that embraces sports; its almost a religion. Read Friday Night Lights for an example of Texas' love of football. (The Cowboys have been around for years. Other towns with pro sports where college FB thrives: Ohio has the Browns and Bengals;. Detroit Lions in MI. Packers in Wisconsin, Atlanta, Chiefs in MO....)golden sloth said:
I feel it should be noted that one of the main reasons why college football thrived in certain parts of the country more than others is because they did not have competition from professional sports teams for the local audience. Places like Alabama and Omaha did not have a local nfl team, therefore the local rooting interest was for the college team.
That is the reason why New York, boston, sf, and the other big cities typically dont have passionate local fan bases supporting the college teams. That is why the networks can focus on that 25% rather than the other 75%.
Many people on the west coast & NE -- including many Cal students -- believe big time college sports is a waste of money, and hate that athletes "take" admission spots.
P12 schools on the west coast are selective, they're not typical state schools in the midwest or south where the state's residents identify the school with the state itself. Cal or UCLA is not the state of California to the average Californian. I can't think of any large state schools north of PA, a region dominated by many private schools.
If the Packers, Cowboys, Astros, and Cubs relocated to within 30 miles of Tuscaloosa, Austin, or Columbus, the religious fervor surrounding college football in those places would mellow out too.
Big Dog said:
Many people on the west coast & NE -- including many Cal students -- believe big time college sports is a waste of money, and hate that athletes "take" admission spots.
BearinOC said:
As the guy said above, this is off topic. Let it rest and I shall do same.
calumnus said:BearinOC said:
As the guy said above, this is off topic. Let it rest and I shall do same.
Agreed. And it is doubtful that the political leanings of the two major media players play a role in this. It is all about the money and their desire to dominate the other. I just thought it was interesting aspect of this whole situation that Bob Igor lead Disney is aligned with the "red state" SEC (Igor was a major backer of Hillary Clinton) and Rupert Murdoch's Fox (I thought Sinclair, but same difference) who was a big backer of Donald Trump, is aligned with the B1G (and may be the new home of the "liberal" West Coast schools). Again, I thought it was interesting and I honestly thought the irony was equal from either side, but I don't have a need to debate any of the above.
Moreover, there is no reason to debate the fact that you consider Fox News to be "liberal" from where you sit on the political spectrum. That is a fact we can all accept as true.
Forum tip: If you have someone blocked, you can still read an individual post from them without unblocking them by clicking on the icon in the upper left corner of the post. In Bobodeluxe's case, it would be the diamond. I have one poster blocked but I still occasionally check posts from him when I feel it might be on topic and not trolling. I've even replied once or twice.BearinOC said:
Bozodeluxe, you have been blocked so I can't read what you said but give it a rest, Boomer
The concern is the SEC is trying to create a super conference so that if you add California (SC and UCLA), Oregon, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Washington, etc. to the equation, it starts looking very different.calumnus said:sketchy9 said:I generally agree with you, but the question becomes is the gain of south and midwest audience enough to offset the loss of coastal CA audience, particularly once you factor in typical spending of each population? I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone does. It's an interesting thing to consider though.71Bear said:I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
A guiding principle: never base anything regarding the US as a whole on the observations of people who live in Coastal California. We are an outlier. And, quite frankly, that is why I like living here.
It is not just California, the SEC excludes the major centers of population and wealth in the US, most of both coasts and the Midwest. There is a reason the Confederacy lost the Civil War and that was before the massive growth of the West and Midwest.
State and % of US GPD:
Texas 8.4%
Florida 5.2%
Georgia 3.0%'
Tennessee 1.7%
Missouri 1.5%
Louisiana 1.2%
South Carolina 1.1%
Alabama 1.1%
Kentucky 1.0%
Oklahoma 0.9%
Arkansas 0.6%
Mississippi 0.5%
Together that is about 25% of US GDP
How does it make sense for ESPN to focus on the 25% to the extent it would crowd out and exclude 75%? Why would ESPN pay big bucks for the CFP if it is only going to be a rehash of the SEC season? Why watch the SEC regular season if it only determines seeding in the CFP?
wifeisafurd said:The concern is the SEC is trying to create a super conference so that if you add California (SC and UCLA), Oregon, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Washington, etc. to the equation, it starts looking very different.calumnus said:sketchy9 said:I generally agree with you, but the question becomes is the gain of south and midwest audience enough to offset the loss of coastal CA audience, particularly once you factor in typical spending of each population? I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone does. It's an interesting thing to consider though.71Bear said:I think what many Cal fans forget is they are not the intended audience. The focus of the college athletics industry is the Midwest and South. They are the people who live and die every Saturday. They are the intended audience. For every Cal fan who says, "no thanks", there are a thousands in other parts of the country who say, "more, please".GivemTheAxe said:LegoBear said:
I wonder if this is going to end up long term killing college football as well. If this end up leading to a super league with a few teams will they eventually be able to compete with the NFL?
For instance I only care about watching SEC or B1G games because I started watching Cal football. If Cal is no longer playing with those big boys or never did I don't think I'll care anymore and will go back to just watching NFL games instead of some super league.
Maybe that's just me and the new super leagues will be able to continue to pull in big and ever growing numbers. Looks like we'll see.
Agree. I said much the same in my post way back when.
By eliminating the relevance of more and more colleges, TV is eating away at the national viewership that has made college football so popular on TV. That's not a good (viable) long term strategy.
Most successful businesses seek to increase their customer base not decrease that base.
But the same is true about many other recent fan-unfriendly changes brought about by TV: moving games away from Saturday, Late night or early morning games, (worst of all) non-disclosure of the starting times of games until a few days before the scheduled game day.
When we die hard fans move on to the "great stadium in the sky", there will be no more fans to take our place here on earth.
A guiding principle: never base anything regarding the US as a whole on the observations of people who live in Coastal California. We are an outlier. And, quite frankly, that is why I like living here.
It is not just California, the SEC excludes the major centers of population and wealth in the US, most of both coasts and the Midwest. There is a reason the Confederacy lost the Civil War and that was before the massive growth of the West and Midwest.
State and % of US GPD:
Texas 8.4%
Florida 5.2%
Georgia 3.0%'
Tennessee 1.7%
Missouri 1.5%
Louisiana 1.2%
South Carolina 1.1%
Alabama 1.1%
Kentucky 1.0%
Oklahoma 0.9%
Arkansas 0.6%
Mississippi 0.5%
Together that is about 25% of US GDP
How does it make sense for ESPN to focus on the 25% to the extent it would crowd out and exclude 75%? Why would ESPN pay big bucks for the CFP if it is only going to be a rehash of the SEC season? Why watch the SEC regular season if it only determines seeding in the CFP?