About covers it.
Temple Mt. Sinai in EPDgoldnbaer said:
St.Mary's in WC.
MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
2) There ARE some logistics to adding 4 more teams to the B1G. If they did it to make a 6 team "Pacific Pod"...how would that work exactly? There would be 20 teams in the B1G at that point, which is not divisible by 6. 24 is, but I highly doubt the B1G expands to 24 teams unless it includes teams from the ACC/ND. Is there some other prized school I'm missing somewhere?
20 teams makes the most sense as 4 5 team divisions...which would call for a 5 team west coast pod, not 6. The next number that makes sense is 3 7 team pods, and would require the addition of one more school. Utah maybe? You could put Nebraska in the pacific "pod" and add another school in the central/north east area, but I'm unsure what school you would go after.
I actually really like the idea of 3 7 team pods, with the winner of each pod + the best second place finisher going to a 4 team "playoff" for the conference championship. That keeps the intrigue of "rankings" and what not viable, and creates more discussion / disputes which college football seems to live off of, but how does a 4 team conference championship fit in with a 12 team playoff?
You're almost more likely to end up with 2 10 team divisions where you play everyone in your division and maybe 1 team in the other division? So you play every team once a decade? Not sure I'm a fan of that.
Maybe they get more creative than that? 2 10 team divisions, play all teams in your division for a 9 game conference schedule, then during championship game weekend instead of just having the winner of each division play, you have 1 v 1, 2 v 2, 3 v3, etc? But what are they playing for, and again, how does this fit with a 12 team play off?
Bottom line, the B1G is in no rush, unless it results in more $$$. If they invite Cal/Stanford/Washington/Oregon today they'll get a yes. If they extend the invitation in 2 years they'll get a yes. In 5 years they'd likely get a yes too. The only reason to rush is if they need more local games for USC/UCLA, or if they think they'll get priced out of adding them because the Pac12 contract ends up being more than they are willing to pay.
The Big Ten deal contains an escalator clause if there is expansion. So adding more teams won't necessarily hurt the payout for existing teams in the conference. https://www.si.com/college/byu/football/how-the-big-ten-tv-deal-impacts-big-12-expansioncalumnus said:MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
2) There ARE some logistics to adding 4 more teams to the B1G. If they did it to make a 6 team "Pacific Pod"...how would that work exactly? There would be 20 teams in the B1G at that point, which is not divisible by 6. 24 is, but I highly doubt the B1G expands to 24 teams unless it includes teams from the ACC/ND. Is there some other prized school I'm missing somewhere?
20 teams makes the most sense as 4 5 team divisions...which would call for a 5 team west coast pod, not 6. The next number that makes sense is 3 7 team pods, and would require the addition of one more school. Utah maybe? You could put Nebraska in the pacific "pod" and add another school in the central/north east area, but I'm unsure what school you would go after.
I actually really like the idea of 3 7 team pods, with the winner of each pod + the best second place finisher going to a 4 team "playoff" for the conference championship. That keeps the intrigue of "rankings" and what not viable, and creates more discussion / disputes which college football seems to live off of, but how does a 4 team conference championship fit in with a 12 team playoff?
You're almost more likely to end up with 2 10 team divisions where you play everyone in your division and maybe 1 team in the other division? So you play every team once a decade? Not sure I'm a fan of that.
Maybe they get more creative than that? 2 10 team divisions, play all teams in your division for a 9 game conference schedule, then during championship game weekend instead of just having the winner of each division play, you have 1 v 1, 2 v 2, 3 v3, etc? But what are they playing for, and again, how does this fit with a 12 team play off?
Bottom line, the B1G is in no rush, unless it results in more $$$. If they invite Cal/Stanford/Washington/Oregon today they'll get a yes. If they extend the invitation in 2 years they'll get a yes. In 5 years they'd likely get a yes too. The only reason to rush is if they need more local games for USC/UCLA, or if they think they'll get priced out of adding them because the Pac12 contract ends up being more than they are willing to pay.
The B1G had two 7 team divisions. Add a 6 team Pacific division for your 20 teams. It is only until the ACC can be broken up and you go to 24. Or 30.
The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
I realize both UO and UW can make the case that they are stronger in FB and therefore should get more, but UO for one is a lousy media market size wise. Not so much UW. But neither are the scope of the Bay Area/Sacto market. Matter of fact Sacramento by itself is the equal of Portland (tiny diff with UO not even in Portland) and near Seattle. Now add not just SF and Oakland but the entire Bay Area to that and UO/UW have a weakened case.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
And it is what happened when Rutgers and Maryland joined the Big Ten -- the schools transitioned over seven years or so to a full share. The same will happen, I am sure, if Cal joins.golden sloth said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
I believe that is what happened when colorado and Utah join the Pac.
In fact, the Regents will be ecstatic because having Cal join the Big Ten avoids the huge financial hit of being left in the Pac-12, and because having Cal in the Big Ten eases travel problems for UCLA athletes. The entire reason why the Regents (or at least one Regent) are saying that "all the options are on the table" is to pressure the Big Ten to take Cal.Dgoldnbaer said:
I'm in total agreement - the regents will never get in the way of Cal going to the Big 10.
Just to break it to you but the regents most decidedly in its current form do not consider Cal a "flagship" - something which it explicitly is not formally recognized as being in the state master plan for higher ed.sycasey said:
The regents do not care about which conference Cal is in. They do care about:
1. The stadium debt
2. The overall state of the athletic program at the flagship university. If Cal has to cut a bunch of women's programs because there's no more money that will be a bad look.
Cal in the B1G solves all of that. Cal going Div 3 does not.
Yeah, but informally . . . they know.socaltownie said:Just to break it to you but the regents most decidedly in its current form do not consider Cal a "flagship" - something which it explicitly is not formally recognized as being in the state master plan for higher ed.sycasey said:
The regents do not care about which conference Cal is in. They do care about:
1. The stadium debt
2. The overall state of the athletic program at the flagship university. If Cal has to cut a bunch of women's programs because there's no more money that will be a bad look.
Cal in the B1G solves all of that. Cal going Div 3 does not.
I sincerely doubt that the four schools would receive different payouts.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
If it happens, almost certainly yes.philly1121 said:
So if all this is true, do CU, Utah, Arizona and ASU bolt for the Big 12?
berserkeley said:I sincerely doubt that the four schools would receive different payouts.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
For one, the former president of Fox Sports said that Oregon + Washington were worth about $60 million and Cal + Stanford were worth $90 million so they don't deserve more.
For another, they hold no cards to be making any kind of demand. I am sure the Big Ten is more than happy to leave Oregon behind if they start making demands.
And, finally, the Big Ten is an "everyone takes the same reduced cut until becoming full fledged members and then everyone earns the same cut" kind of conference so I doubt they'd even entertain the idea of paying out new members at different rates.
i don't see a ton of reason to play us. if he wants to troll a message board he can certainly find ones with more trafficHateRed said:
I think this guy is playing us…
Isn't it true that UCLA and USC will get a full share immediately? Or is that just an internet rumor? Rutgers and Maryland, by contrast, went through a seven-year transition period.berserkeley said:I sincerely doubt that the four schools would receive different payouts.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
For one, the former president of Fox Sports said that Oregon + Washington were worth about $60 million and Cal + Stanford were worth $90 million so they don't deserve more.
For another, they hold no cards to be making any kind of demand. I am sure the Big Ten is more than happy to leave Oregon behind if they start making demands.
And, finally, the Big Ten is an "everyone takes the same reduced cut until becoming full fledged members and then everyone earns the same cut" kind of conference so I doubt they'd even entertain the idea of paying out new members at different rates.
Re: Oregon's market. You can make the argument based on things like this map that they have a "market" that extends beyond their own state and thus should get credit for that. I think this extended popularity is very much contingent on them continuing to have football success. If that goes away then IMO this "market" contracts quickly. But they do have it for now.OdontoBear66 said:I realize both UO and UW can make the case that they are stronger in FB and therefore should get more, but UO for one is a lousy media market size wise. Not so much UW. But neither are the scope of the Bay Area/Sacto market. Matter of fact Sacramento by itself is the equal of Portland (tiny diff with UO not even in Portland) and near Seattle. Now add not just SF and Oakland but the entire Bay Area to that and UO/UW have a weakened case.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
If you think about it - UCLA and USC are getting shafted as a full share member. They are worth 250 million to the PAC 12. They are probably worth 350 million to the Big 10 at this point. Yet they are getting about 160 million in revenue. So, yes they are getting a full share. But less than they deserve.gardenstatebear said:Isn't it true that UCLA and USC will get a full share immediately? Or is that just an internet rumor? Rutgers and Maryland, by contrast, went through a seven-year transition period.berserkeley said:I sincerely doubt that the four schools would receive different payouts.MrGPAC said:OdontoBear66 said:The money is so critical but why can't it be started at a lower rate to satisfy the existing members and then promises or contracts to gradually increase with time. We all know because this is about money it will be worth much more tomorrow than today, so promises can be made to UW, UO, 'furd and Cal. This whole money thing makes me think of Arte Moreno just announcing plans to sell the Angels---bought about 15 years ago for under $200M, I think I recall, with an asking now of $2B....MrGPAC said:
As far as I can tell there are two major hangups to Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford being invited to the B1G:
1) Money. It all comes down to money. Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford aren't worth as much as UCLA/USC, and the current schools aren't going to take a pay cut to let these 4 schools in. That means they will have to take a smaller slice of the pie. The question then becomes how much smaller.
I'm sure the B1G schools would like to pay as little a possible (giving any extra money earned to the rest of the conference members), and Oregon/Washington/Cal/Stanford would want as much as possible (and certainly more than they'd get if they don't jump ship). This is going to come down to what the schools think they can get if they don't join the B1G, set that as a floor, and then how much more than that they think they are worth.
Everyone has big plans for these new arrangements so why not a graduated entrance. Cal would probably start out with just about what they get from the Pac and then incrementally increase.
The point is it's something that would have to be negotiated and would take time to get all 4 schools to agree to. Oregon wants more than cal/Stanford....cal is just happy for the invite, uw is negotiating to be on same tier or better than Oregon... A lot can go on there.
In principle the b1g could say they wanted the four schools tomorrow and it could take a month to finalize.
Possibly even longer with potential battles from Oregon state and Washington state, and cal having to go through the uc regents for approval. You may think that's a no brainer on the regents part....but they also want financial models if cal were to drop to d3....
For one, the former president of Fox Sports said that Oregon + Washington were worth about $60 million and Cal + Stanford were worth $90 million so they don't deserve more.
For another, they hold no cards to be making any kind of demand. I am sure the Big Ten is more than happy to leave Oregon behind if they start making demands.
And, finally, the Big Ten is an "everyone takes the same reduced cut until becoming full fledged members and then everyone earns the same cut" kind of conference so I doubt they'd even entertain the idea of paying out new members at different rates.
I think this is a great point TandemBear. We seem to want to go to the Big 10 for no other reason than the "fear of missing out". We almost have to join at this point because if we don't - the house crumbles. We miss out on all the money to get beaten up on so we can save all other sports. Is it worth it? Probably.TandemBear said:So we're trying to jump to the Big Ten so we can have more money. Money is CRUCIAL to be competitive.Strykur said:Yeah unless we routinely make playoff trips in a stripped-down PAC-12, better to take the money in the Big Ten even if it means we're getting beaten up a bit.dimitrig said:Except for the $$$sycasey said:Strykur said:It just did.golden sloth said:There would also be an expanded College football playoff.sycasey said:
https://athlonsports.com/college-football/report-big-ten-targeting-5-major-schools-for-conference-expansionQuote:
The Big Ten is reportedly "targeting" five schools for expansion, including Notre Dame, Oregon, Washington and two more Pac-12 schools. Those final two programs likely include Cal and Stanford.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/34509443/board-managers-decide-12-team-college-football-playoff-sources-say
This actually creates an incentive to stay in the Pac-12.
But we're switching to a conference with much harder competition, so we'll be less competitive.
Ok, got it!
And yes, I understand this is the reality of the current college football environment. But when you're chasing money for money's sake, why are you doing it? Who really benefits? Will this improve the game on the field? Will this improve the game-day experience for Cal fans? Will this improve the college football experience for Cal students? Or will the main improvement for fans really just be the spectacle/presentation piped into our homes that we can watch on our 85" screens with all our personal creature comforts? (And no inconveniences like east-side stadium temps, parking hassles and all the rest.)
Oh and the TRUE beneficiaries? Everyone feeding at the trough that is college football, mainly the head coaches, their coordinators, and the top-level execs. throughout the system. THEY are the ones to realize the big benefits of the current system.
Is that really what "student athletes" should be playing for?
sycasey said:If it happens, almost certainly yes.philly1121 said:
So if all this is true, do CU, Utah, Arizona and ASU bolt for the Big 12?
And OSU and WSU . . . good luck in the Mountain West.
Setting aside the benefit of saving the scholarships of 800 plus students who might not otherwise be able to attend Cal, I think the subtext is that we believe with the investments we are making we can create a championship program. Candidly the Big 10 is not all that even today and with size, recruiting pool, history and academic profile I like Cal's chances in competing with this group. I personally wouldn't support it, much less promote it, if I didn't think that Cal has the raw building materials to win.philly1121 said:I think this is a great point TandemBear. We seem to want to go to the Big 10 for no other reason than the "fear of missing out". We almost have to join at this point because if we don't - the house crumbles. We miss out on all the money to get beaten up on so we can save all other sports. Is it worth it? Probably.TandemBear said:So we're trying to jump to the Big Ten so we can have more money. Money is CRUCIAL to be competitive.Strykur said:Yeah unless we routinely make playoff trips in a stripped-down PAC-12, better to take the money in the Big Ten even if it means we're getting beaten up a bit.dimitrig said:Except for the $$$sycasey said:Strykur said:It just did.golden sloth said:There would also be an expanded College football playoff.sycasey said:
https://athlonsports.com/college-football/report-big-ten-targeting-5-major-schools-for-conference-expansionQuote:
The Big Ten is reportedly "targeting" five schools for expansion, including Notre Dame, Oregon, Washington and two more Pac-12 schools. Those final two programs likely include Cal and Stanford.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/34509443/board-managers-decide-12-team-college-football-playoff-sources-say
This actually creates an incentive to stay in the Pac-12.
But we're switching to a conference with much harder competition, so we'll be less competitive.
Ok, got it!
And yes, I understand this is the reality of the current college football environment. But when you're chasing money for money's sake, why are you doing it? Who really benefits? Will this improve the game on the field? Will this improve the game-day experience for Cal fans? Will this improve the college football experience for Cal students? Or will the main improvement for fans really just be the spectacle/presentation piped into our homes that we can watch on our 85" screens with all our personal creature comforts? (And no inconveniences like east-side stadium temps, parking hassles and all the rest.)
Oh and the TRUE beneficiaries? Everyone feeding at the trough that is college football, mainly the head coaches, their coordinators, and the top-level execs. throughout the system. THEY are the ones to realize the big benefits of the current system.
Is that really what "student athletes" should be playing for?
But we shouldn't kid ourselves here. We're praying for a Pac 6 lite - to get UCLA, Oregon, SC, Stanford and UW every year, plus 5 more in conference rotation and two OOC pansies. And I say, what is the difference? Probably upwards of $20-30 mil. Perhaps not at the start.
I'm not sure what defines student athlete anymore. But for all the people on their knees begging to get into the Big10, is it worth the price of going .500 or less every year for a few million more? To save intercollegiate athletics at Cal, probably.
We're already going .500 every year. I see no reason to believe our fortunes would be much different in the B1G.philly1121 said:I think this is a great point TandemBear. We seem to want to go to the Big 10 for no other reason than the "fear of missing out". We almost have to join at this point because if we don't - the house crumbles. We miss out on all the money to get beaten up on so we can save all other sports. Is it worth it? Probably.TandemBear said:So we're trying to jump to the Big Ten so we can have more money. Money is CRUCIAL to be competitive.Strykur said:Yeah unless we routinely make playoff trips in a stripped-down PAC-12, better to take the money in the Big Ten even if it means we're getting beaten up a bit.dimitrig said:Except for the $$$sycasey said:Strykur said:It just did.golden sloth said:There would also be an expanded College football playoff.sycasey said:
https://athlonsports.com/college-football/report-big-ten-targeting-5-major-schools-for-conference-expansionQuote:
The Big Ten is reportedly "targeting" five schools for expansion, including Notre Dame, Oregon, Washington and two more Pac-12 schools. Those final two programs likely include Cal and Stanford.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/34509443/board-managers-decide-12-team-college-football-playoff-sources-say
This actually creates an incentive to stay in the Pac-12.
But we're switching to a conference with much harder competition, so we'll be less competitive.
Ok, got it!
And yes, I understand this is the reality of the current college football environment. But when you're chasing money for money's sake, why are you doing it? Who really benefits? Will this improve the game on the field? Will this improve the game-day experience for Cal fans? Will this improve the college football experience for Cal students? Or will the main improvement for fans really just be the spectacle/presentation piped into our homes that we can watch on our 85" screens with all our personal creature comforts? (And no inconveniences like east-side stadium temps, parking hassles and all the rest.)
Oh and the TRUE beneficiaries? Everyone feeding at the trough that is college football, mainly the head coaches, their coordinators, and the top-level execs. throughout the system. THEY are the ones to realize the big benefits of the current system.
Is that really what "student athletes" should be playing for?
But we shouldn't kid ourselves here. We're praying for a Pac 6 lite - to get UCLA, Oregon, SC, Stanford and UW every year, plus 5 more in conference rotation and two OOC pansies. And I say, what is the difference? Probably upwards of $20-30 mil. Perhaps not at the start.
I'm not sure what defines student athlete anymore. But for all the people on their knees begging to get into the Big10, is it worth the price of going .500 or less every year for a few million more? To save intercollegiate athletics at Cal, probably.
philly1121 said:I think this is a great point TandemBear. We seem to want to go to the Big 10 for no other reason than the "fear of missing out". We almost have to join at this point because if we don't - the house crumbles. We miss out on all the money to get beaten up on so we can save all other sports. Is it worth it? Probably.TandemBear said:So we're trying to jump to the Big Ten so we can have more money. Money is CRUCIAL to be competitive.Strykur said:Yeah unless we routinely make playoff trips in a stripped-down PAC-12, better to take the money in the Big Ten even if it means we're getting beaten up a bit.dimitrig said:Except for the $$$sycasey said:Strykur said:It just did.golden sloth said:There would also be an expanded College football playoff.sycasey said:
https://athlonsports.com/college-football/report-big-ten-targeting-5-major-schools-for-conference-expansionQuote:
The Big Ten is reportedly "targeting" five schools for expansion, including Notre Dame, Oregon, Washington and two more Pac-12 schools. Those final two programs likely include Cal and Stanford.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/34509443/board-managers-decide-12-team-college-football-playoff-sources-say
This actually creates an incentive to stay in the Pac-12.
But we're switching to a conference with much harder competition, so we'll be less competitive.
Ok, got it!
And yes, I understand this is the reality of the current college football environment. But when you're chasing money for money's sake, why are you doing it? Who really benefits? Will this improve the game on the field? Will this improve the game-day experience for Cal fans? Will this improve the college football experience for Cal students? Or will the main improvement for fans really just be the spectacle/presentation piped into our homes that we can watch on our 85" screens with all our personal creature comforts? (And no inconveniences like east-side stadium temps, parking hassles and all the rest.)
Oh and the TRUE beneficiaries? Everyone feeding at the trough that is college football, mainly the head coaches, their coordinators, and the top-level execs. throughout the system. THEY are the ones to realize the big benefits of the current system.
Is that really what "student athletes" should be playing for?
But we shouldn't kid ourselves here. We're praying for a Pac 6 lite - to get UCLA, Oregon, SC, Stanford and UW every year, plus 5 more in conference rotation and two OOC pansies. And I say, what is the difference? Probably upwards of $20-30 mil. Perhaps not at the start.
I'm not sure what defines student athlete anymore. But for all the people on their knees begging to get into the Big10, is it worth the price of going .500 or less every year for a few million more? To save intercollegiate athletics at Cal, probably.