calumnus said:
SoFlaBear said:
calumnus said:
DiabloWags said:
I got to think that FSU is squirming to get out of their $120 million dollar exit fee to join the B1G.
I thought FSU wanted into the SEC?
$120 million might be paid off at about $11 million per year for 12 years. If Cal and Stanford slip into FSU's and Clemson's slots in the current contract, we make more than B-12 (and more than the B1G is likely offering) and there is $22 million more to be split among the schools.
Miami definitely wants to be in the SEC.
FSU and Clemson have something of the same predicament - there is already an SEC team in their states. This is not an insurmountable problem - Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi all have two SEC teams. But the idea has been floated that it might be more profitable for all parties concerned if FSU and Clemson went to the B1G.
As you likely know, the problem is the ACC GOR (Grant of Rights) which has a really steep exit fee and runs (IIRC) through 2036. FSU, Miami, and Clemson are looking for a way out by fair means or foul. Two weeks ago, it was floated that FSU, Miami, and Clemson would find five friends and essentially dissolve the GOR or possibly the entire conference - but this has not yet come to pass.
Adding Cal and Stanford (as another poster pointed out - I think in this thread) serves several interests. Two respectable schools with long histories and superb academics. Two schools that could constitute additional votes to prevent a conference meltdown or a dissolution of the GOR. And/or two schools that could help soften the blow if the long sought loophole is found to allow FSU, Miami, and Clemson to leave.
Agreed. But I think maybe we get the ACC votes by also being two more schools that might vote for dissolution if we had an agreement to get into the B1G for more $$$.
Very true. And if it doesn't dissolve, we are in until 2036 in what is already considered to be a less-than-favorable TV deal. SMU might get thrown into the mix, which is another slice of the pie, but perhaps the Bay Area and Dallas convince ESPN to kick some money into the pot.
All of these discussions we are having on this board come down to "Cal ends up in a deal with a P5 conference and ends up with money but a bad travel situation" or "Cal ends up in the MW, as an independent, or in some reimagined PAC, and has a good travel situation, but a very bad financial situation" of "Cal bows out of NCAA football." Every day the media narrative shifts somewhat. A few days ago, many reporters seemed to still feel the B1G would reach out. Now it seems like the "pause at 18" or "they want to wait on Cal and Stanford and see if FSU/Clemson/ND have interest in those slots." We can certainly give it another week, but I don't think they are going to come knocking, and at some point soon we have to start looking at scheduling for ourselves if no clear solution is emerging.
I kind of like the fact that there is an ulterior motive for bringing Cal and Stanford in. We'd bring some prestige and a big, new market for the ACC, but mostly we'd bring value by helping the ACC expand and perhaps get leverage for a better TV deal or perhaps survive if those three schools buy their ways out of the GOR.
..and the basketball would be amazing. If this does come to pass, maybe we and our would-be partners discuss reaching out to Gonzaga.