I see it this way as well. The big thing will be getting a big enough TV deal to integrate 4 teams without having to touch the current members payouts. If that can happen and the 4 P12 programs are ok with the reduced shares to start then I think you have a deal.OskiDeLaHoya said:6956bear said:Yes that $320M number is needed to make them full share partners. But there are numerous reports that the 4 P12 schools would be willing to join with less than a full share to start. Also it is possible that the Big 10 would take just 2 additional schools for now. Which would make the annual payout by Amazon or anybody else less. There was a report just 2 weeks back that as little as $100M from Amazon could get a deal done. That would suggest that UW and UO would join for less than a full share.OskiDeLaHoya said:
Might we hear some expansion news in the coming days?
I don't post often on Twitter but I lurk there for news and the chatter this week seems more than normal. It's all speculative, so I don't have any specific insider info to link. But a few things that caught my eye today:
1 - This Rick Neuheisel quote from ESPNU radio on SiriusXM this morning:"I have it from sources that it's all but done in respects to Washington and Oregon" (to the BIG)
— Doug Scott (@DouglasTS) October 11, 2022
Rick Neuheisel on ESPN radio today
If you listen to the clip in the thread, he adds "potentially Stanford and Cal"
2- Matt Hayes had this article
https://saturdaytradition.com/big-ten-football/the-b1g-10-fire-his-son-iowas-kirk-ferentz-is-in-a-tough-spot-but-theres-little-choice/
Scroll down to no. 8, which had this tidbit:
Two separate industry sources have told me the Big Ten is deep into talks with Amazon to join the league's media rights group that includes Fox, CBS and NBC. The Big Ten needs Amazon to pay an estimated $320 million annually to make the 4 new teams whole ($80 million each) with the rest of the Big Ten in 2024.
3 - It's Big Ten Basketball media day today. Conference leaders are in Minneapolis. Among other things , they will be discussing next year's football scheduling and possibly doing away with divisions. But with all of them gathered together, could further expansion also be on the agenda?
Also - and take this with the largest grain of salt: the B1G Chief of Staff's Twitter account started following 700+ accounts in a matter of hours today. I checked his profile earlier in the day and he was following 9300 users. A couple of hours later he was following 10K+ users. He's at 10.2K now. I had read over the summer that he followed a lot of accounts around the time of the UCLA/USC move. The presumption was that he's looking for leaks.
Maybe adding/removing accounts is something he normally does (and I hadn't visited his profile recently to see if this is part of a pattern) but starting to follow 900+ accounts in one day seems like a sign. Take it for what it's worth.
There is an escalator clause in the current deal. It does allow for more money if the conference adds members. Most feel that clause is primarily in place to lure Notre Dame which is the big chip the conference desires. But apparently the clause does allow for some escalation if others join. How much is not publicly known but there are rumors it is higher than some believe.
The P12 cannot be excited that Amazon is the rumored partner in further Big 10 media rights talks. There is an expectation that a streamer will partner with a linear provider to create a larger P12 deal than a stand alone linear provider would offer. Some of the linear providers have streaming options. NBC has Peacock for example and could provide games on USA and CNBC as they do now with English Premier League soccer. Would NBC take the P12 over extending their ND deal? Seems unlikely to me, especially with them being part of the new Big 10 media deal.
There are some that still believe the Big 10 will add just 2 for now and try and leverage the 2 remaining slots to get Notre Dame to move. I am not in that camp. I believe ND stands pat for now.
The worst scenario for Cal is that the Big 10 adds UW and UO now and stops. That kills the P12. It makes any sort of TV deal less valuable for the networks. It could however trigger the regents to move decisively against UCLA which is something I think they would prefer to avoid.
If enough money is offered to add 4 teams I do believe Cal would be one of them. It makes sense for the Big 10 despite Cal not being a premier sports program. The market, location, academic profile etc are too hard for the Big 10 presidents to ignore. But it seems unlikely they would be offered a full share to join.
I didn't put much stock in the $320M figure. I would be very surprised if the B1G were able to negotiate a deal that large for what would essentially be the 4th, 5th or 6th best game each week. I was more interested to learn that he had multiple sources telling him they were deep in negotiations. I can see why Amazon would prefer to make a deal with an expanded B1G that includes 4-6 teams from the West vs making a deal with the Pac-10/12. A package with the B1G will have some cross-country matchups that will help drive better ratings (even if it's mid-level teams) compared to a package with primarily West Coast teams
I don't see the B1G only adding 2 teams if they're serious about adding a 4th late night window on Saturday. With 2 teams, you're going going to get a steady diet of UW and UO (and maybe UCLA ) home games every week. Not sure if UW and UO want to sign up for that but who knows. You need more teams added to the rotation. And I think USC has enough sway to avoid those games.
What could an Amazon package look like? If it were me, I would build a package of 6-8 Friday night games (maybe have some of the middling B1G teams host some in the Central time zone; games start at 5PM CT or 6PM PT, depending on who's hosting), 6-8 late night Saturday games (hosted by UW/UO/Cal/Stan/UCLA), and/or a handful of mid-day games.
I think games on Amazon will garner pretty good exposure. Imagine all the promos that will run on NFL Thursday Night Football for a Friday game the following day or a Saturday night game.