berserkeley said:
BearSD said:
juarezbear said:
6956bear said:
Anarchistbear said:
Clemson and Florida State are SEC programs. Very surprised if this is true.
Many folks around ACC country believe FSU wants the B1G. And the B1G has them as a potential target. The B1G would love FSU, UNC, UVa and possibly Clemson and Miami
I find this interesting in that UNC is big in basketball and sucks at everything else. UVa is on par with Cal in terms of football and basketball. Curious to hear that the B1G would want them instead of Cal and Furd but who the hell knows these days. It almost feels like Fox and ESPN want to punish the remaining the Pac teams.
"almost"?
It's very possible that Empty Suit George pissed off ESPN and Fox so much that they decided to let the Pac burn to the ground.
Fox has refused to negotiate with the Pac-12 since USC and UCLA announced for the B1G. It definitely feels like they are trying to orchestrate the Pac-12's demise. Fox apparently doesn't mind paying the Big XII more if they poach the worst Pac-12 teams.
Between Fox not being willing to talk to us, ESPN offering one conference 3x the value of anyone else they work with, and ESPN undercutting the Pac on one of their potential media partners (CW), you almost start to get the feeling that ESPN/Fox resent the Pac. I can't help but think they resent the Pac network. The Pac was the only conference that created their own network completely independent of ESPN/Fox, and they did so with the intent of doing direct to customer distribution. Fox/ESPN were cut out of the process and are now returning the favor.
What's sad to me is these moves long term are going to kill college sports. Regionalism, high amounts of participation, history, tradition, rivalries....these are what make college football great. Getting rid of all of that leaves you with a worse version of the NFL. How popular is AAA baseball? How much revenue does it generate? Why do we think that stripping everything away from College football that separates it from a defacto minor league is going to do anything but turn it into one?
And the worst part is the parties that seem to be driving this, the media companies, are slowly going out of business and being replaced by a new content distribution model. While they cling to existence they are killing the product they are trying to sell, and when they squeeze all of the value out of it killing it, they won't be around to deal with the consequences.