^ +1000
BearSD said:philly1121 said:
I dunno man. For all the money I've spent, saying my degree is geared towards accounting in Florida, Sweden and the Caymen Islands. I don't think they're telling me the truth.
Here's some questions that perhaps you, wiaf or calumnus can answer:
Does Lyons have a good strategic parntership with Knowlton? If not, will he seek to replace him?
Its only been a little over a months since Lyons officially took over. I wonder how the Athletic Dept. budget looks to his eyes.
Lyons is the CEO of a very large and very elite university with an annual budget that exceeds 3 billion dollars. He is smart enough to know that athletics is just one of a large number of pieces of this massive university, and that the AD has to run athletics capably with only minimal attention from the chancellor, or be replaced by someone who will.
The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
Athletics is such a large part of the college equation for Power Conferene schools, every CEO and AD of a power conference school is putting in overtime with all the changes in the landscape of college sports. If not, ....
There is no doubt the Chancellor has a multitude of issues that are high priority. But athletics is important to a large number of folks including many donors to the University. This is a Cal sports fan forum and to this audience keeping the athletic programs alive and hopefully thrive is an important topic.socaltownie said:The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
Athletics is such a large part of the college equation for Power Conferene schools, every CEO and AD of a power conference school is putting in overtime with all the changes in the landscape of college sports. If not, ....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
3) Tenure and the labor system. No university president I know is happy with the current two (very) tiered labor system but really no one has a clue on how to reform it or make it work without a huge amount of blood on the table. It really isn't the tenure guarantee - it is a model of elevating research productivity over teaching productivity in an era of fierce competition over enrollment _AND_ (see below) a demand from students of their degree having real workforce relevance. It is also the case that we know we have vastly overproduced phDs and yet the modern power schools (this is almost exclusively an R1 problem) require graduate labor to operate - even though the prospects for these students is bleak.
4) Questions about the value of Higher Ed. The old model is under severe criticism but lots of legacy players (both in and outside of Higher ed) are protective of the current 180 credit hour; 4 years to finish model. Efforts to try to tweak it have met strong resistance. But consumers (if not (yet) employers) are strongly questioning the value of that old model. Universities feel caught between a rock and a hard place - with consumers asking for alternatives but employers/accreditors/philanthropy still wedded to the old way.
We really forget ) that Cal athletics really isn't the main job of the chancellor. Really visible one. One that dominants the way that popular press covers Higher Ed. But really a lot more important to cal over the long term is how, for example, to think about alternative models for granting credit hours (micro credentials? Competency models?) and how to navigate that through the bureaucracy of higher ed. Those are the topics that lead issues of the Chronical (not the one in the Bay area but the one higher ed leaders read).
One of the reasons I have advocated for "ivy league lite" is that I want Lyons to figure out the above because it really is the most important thing for the system to get right (and also reflects, I think, a modern student body that is a lot less focused on the happenings on the football field and a lot more on getting a job).
6956bear said:There is no doubt the Chancellor has a multitude of issues that are high priority. But athletics is important to a large number of folks including many donors to the University. This is a Cal sports fan forum and to this audience keeping the athletic programs alive and hopefully thrive is an important topic.socaltownie said:The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
Athletics is such a large part of the college equation for Power Conferene schools, every CEO and AD of a power conference school is putting in overtime with all the changes in the landscape of college sports. If not, ....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
3) Tenure and the labor system. No university president I know is happy with the current two (very) tiered labor system but really no one has a clue on how to reform it or make it work without a huge amount of blood on the table. It really isn't the tenure guarantee - it is a model of elevating research productivity over teaching productivity in an era of fierce competition over enrollment _AND_ (see below) a demand from students of their degree having real workforce relevance. It is also the case that we know we have vastly overproduced phDs and yet the modern power schools (this is almost exclusively an R1 problem) require graduate labor to operate - even though the prospects for these students is bleak.
4) Questions about the value of Higher Ed. The old model is under severe criticism but lots of legacy players (both in and outside of Higher ed) are protective of the current 180 credit hour; 4 years to finish model. Efforts to try to tweak it have met strong resistance. But consumers (if not (yet) employers) are strongly questioning the value of that old model. Universities feel caught between a rock and a hard place - with consumers asking for alternatives but employers/accreditors/philanthropy still wedded to the old way.
We really forget ) that Cal athletics really isn't the main job of the chancellor. Really visible one. One that dominants the way that popular press covers Higher Ed. But really a lot more important to cal over the long term is how, for example, to think about alternative models for granting credit hours (micro credentials? Competency models?) and how to navigate that through the bureaucracy of higher ed. Those are the topics that lead issues of the Chronical (not the one in the Bay area but the one higher ed leaders read).
One of the reasons I have advocated for "ivy league lite" is that I want Lyons to figure out the above because it really is the most important thing for the system to get right (and also reflects, I think, a modern student body that is a lot less focused on the happenings on the football field and a lot more on getting a job).
If done well you can hire a strong AD that can really run things with greater efficiency. There is really no reason that Cal cannot have it all. Lyons needs to have a strong leader run the AD so he can stay out of the way. But it starts with the Chancellor showing support for athletics and then hiring the right people.
Cal can be strong in all areas. Athletics included. I want this Chancellor to be bold in that area.
I agree that Knowlton has to go. I am very hopeful that Lyons has a plan for that to occur. Being able to remove him for cause would be best. But I think Lyons needs to be mindful of potential litigation from Knowlton and the costs associated with that potential.calumnus said:6956bear said:There is no doubt the Chancellor has a multitude of issues that are high priority. But athletics is important to a large number of folks including many donors to the University. This is a Cal sports fan forum and to this audience keeping the athletic programs alive and hopefully thrive is an important topic.socaltownie said:The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
Athletics is such a large part of the college equation for Power Conferene schools, every CEO and AD of a power conference school is putting in overtime with all the changes in the landscape of college sports. If not, ....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
3) Tenure and the labor system. No university president I know is happy with the current two (very) tiered labor system but really no one has a clue on how to reform it or make it work without a huge amount of blood on the table. It really isn't the tenure guarantee - it is a model of elevating research productivity over teaching productivity in an era of fierce competition over enrollment _AND_ (see below) a demand from students of their degree having real workforce relevance. It is also the case that we know we have vastly overproduced phDs and yet the modern power schools (this is almost exclusively an R1 problem) require graduate labor to operate - even though the prospects for these students is bleak.
4) Questions about the value of Higher Ed. The old model is under severe criticism but lots of legacy players (both in and outside of Higher ed) are protective of the current 180 credit hour; 4 years to finish model. Efforts to try to tweak it have met strong resistance. But consumers (if not (yet) employers) are strongly questioning the value of that old model. Universities feel caught between a rock and a hard place - with consumers asking for alternatives but employers/accreditors/philanthropy still wedded to the old way.
We really forget ) that Cal athletics really isn't the main job of the chancellor. Really visible one. One that dominants the way that popular press covers Higher Ed. But really a lot more important to cal over the long term is how, for example, to think about alternative models for granting credit hours (micro credentials? Competency models?) and how to navigate that through the bureaucracy of higher ed. Those are the topics that lead issues of the Chronical (not the one in the Bay area but the one higher ed leaders read).
One of the reasons I have advocated for "ivy league lite" is that I want Lyons to figure out the above because it really is the most important thing for the system to get right (and also reflects, I think, a modern student body that is a lot less focused on the happenings on the football field and a lot more on getting a job).
If done well you can hire a strong AD that can really run things with greater efficiency. There is really no reason that Cal cannot have it all. Lyons needs to have a strong leader run the AD so he can stay out of the way. But it starts with the Chancellor showing support for athletics and then hiring the right people.
Cal can be strong in all areas. Athletics included. I want this Chancellor to be bold in that area.
Knowlton, by lack of experience, temperament and ability was likely the worst possible hire to lead Cal athletics at this critical time in our history.He does not even like Berkeley or California and does not even live in the place that pays him a $1.3 million salary. I would trust ANY random poster on this forum to have done a better job as AD and I am completely serious.
Lyons has many other, more important, issues to attend to than athletics, but few that are going to impact his budget so immediately and over such a long time frame, which is why one of his first orders of business should be removing Knowlton, preferably for cause, but removed in any case, and replacing him with someone who can competently lead Cal athletics with a vision for the future so he can attend to other, more important issues.
wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Honestly that isn't true. Lots of drivers but on the top line his/Cal's budget is a LOT more impacted by the numbnuts in Sacramento and how much they fund each undergrad in the system (as well as restrictions/permissions from the state to go after out of state students that are full pay).calumnus said:6956bear said:There is no doubt the Chancellor has a multitude of issues that are high priority. But athletics is important to a large number of folks including many donors to the University. This is a Cal sports fan forum and to this audience keeping the athletic programs alive and hopefully thrive is an important topic.socaltownie said:The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
Athletics is such a large part of the college equation for Power Conferene schools, every CEO and AD of a power conference school is putting in overtime with all the changes in the landscape of college sports. If not, ....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
3) Tenure and the labor system. No university president I know is happy with the current two (very) tiered labor system but really no one has a clue on how to reform it or make it work without a huge amount of blood on the table. It really isn't the tenure guarantee - it is a model of elevating research productivity over teaching productivity in an era of fierce competition over enrollment _AND_ (see below) a demand from students of their degree having real workforce relevance. It is also the case that we know we have vastly overproduced phDs and yet the modern power schools (this is almost exclusively an R1 problem) require graduate labor to operate - even though the prospects for these students is bleak.
4) Questions about the value of Higher Ed. The old model is under severe criticism but lots of legacy players (both in and outside of Higher ed) are protective of the current 180 credit hour; 4 years to finish model. Efforts to try to tweak it have met strong resistance. But consumers (if not (yet) employers) are strongly questioning the value of that old model. Universities feel caught between a rock and a hard place - with consumers asking for alternatives but employers/accreditors/philanthropy still wedded to the old way.
We really forget ) that Cal athletics really isn't the main job of the chancellor. Really visible one. One that dominants the way that popular press covers Higher Ed. But really a lot more important to cal over the long term is how, for example, to think about alternative models for granting credit hours (micro credentials? Competency models?) and how to navigate that through the bureaucracy of higher ed. Those are the topics that lead issues of the Chronical (not the one in the Bay area but the one higher ed leaders read).
One of the reasons I have advocated for "ivy league lite" is that I want Lyons to figure out the above because it really is the most important thing for the system to get right (and also reflects, I think, a modern student body that is a lot less focused on the happenings on the football field and a lot more on getting a job).
If done well you can hire a strong AD that can really run things with greater efficiency. There is really no reason that Cal cannot have it all. Lyons needs to have a strong leader run the AD so he can stay out of the way. But it starts with the Chancellor showing support for athletics and then hiring the right people.
Cal can be strong in all areas. Athletics included. I want this Chancellor to be bold in that area.
Knowlton, by lack of experience, temperament and ability was likely the worst possible hire to lead Cal athletics at this critical time in our history.He does not even like Berkeley or California and does not even live in the place that pays him a $1.3 million salary. I would trust ANY random poster on this forum to have done a better job as AD and I am completely serious.
Lyons has many other, more important, issues to attend to than athletics, but few that are going to impact his budget so immediately and over such a long time frame, which is why one of his first orders of business should be removing Knowlton, preferably for cause, but removed in any case, and replacing him with someone who can competently lead Cal athletics with a vision for the future so he can attend to other, more important issues.
ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference the 2016 ESPN contract, which is the one that both established the ACC network and payout structure and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension of during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
Yup, this is my big question. All of the reporting at the time of the deal said that Cal/Stanford/SMU were giving up certain percentages of the Tier 1 media revenue to enter the ACC. The language Wilner quotes in the contract seems to state that it is actually a percentage of all media revenue. Now, it could be that there is other contract language elsewhere that spells out the Tier 1 piece and Wilner is either misreading it or doesn't have it. Seems weird that all parties would let a bunch of reporting about Tier 1 go out there without correcting it and then have a contract that says otherwise.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
Yes.BearBoarBlarney said:
The ACC was a life raft to allow us to ride the waves a bit longer rather than sinking to the ocean floor next to the dead Beavers and Cougars.
So I tried to figure out the disconnect with over 1,000 articles that say that the give back of media revenue only applies to tier 1 and what was in the Wilner article, and then I sent an email inquiry to the ACC Commissioner, not expecting any answer. But then I just got a response from the ACC.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
Just to comment on (2) here: UC Berkeley's financial reports indicate that the annual retiree pension and health benefits paid out are more than $430 million. The projected unfunded future liability for pensions alone, not including health benefits, is more than $1.5 billion.socaltownie said:The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....wifeisafurd said:
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
So Wilner is right and the percentage Cal is giving up includes ACC Network revenue.wifeisafurd said:So I tried to figure out the disconnect with over 1,000 articles that say that the give back of media revenue only applies to tier 1 and what was in the Wilner article, and then I sent an email inquiry to the ACC Commissioner, not expecting any answer. But then I just got a response from the ACC.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
What conferences call tier 1, 2 and 3 media rights "varies among conferences" (which I view as main contract with linear TV as tier 1, conference network as tier 2 and streaming and any other stuff as tier 3). The ACC considers there is only 1 tier since ESPN owns all broadcasting rights, period. Any other content that comes from other sources is produced under a sublease from ESPN (e.g., Raycom). So I guess everyone, including reporters that put out all those misleading articles, didn't appreciate how the ACC labels their rights. Obviously the sources that were leaking what the deal was going to be didn't appreciate the ACC nomenclature either. The ACC did not respond to my question was to why 67% versus the reported 70%, which makes sense if you think about it. So I hope that clarifies.
sycasey said:So Wilner is right and the percentage Cal is giving up includes ACC Network revenue.wifeisafurd said:So I tried to figure out the disconnect with over 1,000 articles that say that the give back of media revenue only applies to tier 1 and what was in the Wilner article, and then I sent an email inquiry to the ACC Commissioner, not expecting any answer. But then I just got a response from the ACC.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
What conferences call tier 1, 2 and 3 media rights "varies among conferences" (which I view as main contract with linear TV as tier 1, conference network as tier 2 and streaming and any other stuff as tier 3). The ACC considers there is only 1 tier since ESPN owns all broadcasting rights, period. Any other content that comes from other sources is produced under a sublease from ESPN (e.g., Raycom). So I guess everyone, including reporters that put out all those misleading articles, didn't appreciate how the ACC labels their rights. Obviously the sources that were leaking what the deal was going to be didn't appreciate the ACC nomenclature either. The ACC did not respond to my question was to why 67% versus the reported 70%, which makes sense if you think about it. So I hope that clarifies.
yes, as well as the streaming platform, which is an affiliate of the ACC Network revenue.sycasey said:So Wilner is right and the percentage Cal is giving up includes ACC Network revenue.wifeisafurd said:So I tried to figure out the disconnect with over 1,000 articles that say that the give back of media revenue only applies to tier 1 and what was in the Wilner article, and then I sent an email inquiry to the ACC Commissioner, not expecting any answer. But then I just got a response from the ACC.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
What conferences call tier 1, 2 and 3 media rights "varies among conferences" (which I view as main contract with linear TV as tier 1, conference network as tier 2 and streaming and any other stuff as tier 3). The ACC considers there is only 1 tier since ESPN owns all broadcasting rights, period. Any other content that comes from other sources is produced under a sublease from ESPN (e.g., Raycom). So I guess everyone, including reporters that put out all those misleading articles, didn't appreciate how the ACC labels their rights. Obviously the sources that were leaking what the deal was going to be didn't appreciate the ACC nomenclature either. The ACC did not respond to my question was to why 67% versus the reported 70%, which makes sense if you think about it. So I hope that clarifies.
So the total pension liability is therefore somewhere in the 20 billion dollar range, and so the 1.5 billion is fixed with a slight change in the interest rate over the next 40 years.BearSD said:Just to comment on (2) here: UC Berkeley's financial reports indicate that the annual retiree pension and health benefits paid out are more than $430 million. The projected unfunded future liability for pensions alone, not including health benefits, is more than $1.5 billion.socaltownie said:
The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
Appreciate the initiative to reach out to the ACC - I too would not have expected an answer and would not have even though of it.wifeisafurd said:So I tried to figure out the disconnect with over 1,000 articles that say that the give back of media revenue only applies to tier 1 and what was in the Wilner article, and then I sent an email inquiry to the ACC Commissioner, not expecting any answer. But then I just got a response from the ACC.ColoradoBear said:wifeisafurd said:sycasey said:I also thought that was the case. The reporting was that it was 2/3 of the Tier 1 revenue. Maybe the contract also includes ACC Network (which is Tier 2)?sosheezy said:
My biggest concern was Wilner's analysis/interpretation that we are giving back 2/3 of the ACC Network revenue too, in additional to the base media revenue. I had heard/read/understood/wishcasted that Cal was keeping full shares of ACC Network revenue as well as postseason distributions, and that just the base ESPN revenue was subject to the 2/3 give back.
Cal and Stanford will get a 30% tier 1 share in the first seven years, followed by 70% in year eight and 75% in year nine before getting the full amount. SMU foregoes all tier 1 revenues for 9 years. All three schools will immediately get full revenue shares from the ACC Network, the College Football Playoff, bowl games and NCAA men's basketball tournament units.
Wilner, who has a degree in accounting and a law degree from no where and clearly is out of his area of expertise doesn't understand what he is talking about. There is a plan in place whereby Cal will be made whole by UCLA and UC for lost tier 1 media revenue. Some of the plan has not been announced and formally voted upon.
The strangeness of all this is that this information was out there for some time (almost a year) so I don't know why Wilner's article is newsworthy:
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/sports/acc-stanford-cal-2/3308750/?_osource=db_npd_nbc_kntv_eml_shr
Then there is the added benefit that Wilner misinterprets the actual agreement. I could go on, but the take away should be you take your chances when you rely on Wilner.
Just to loop back to this, Wilner actually did a FOIA on Cal's agreement with the ACC with respect to 'donating' back 67% of media revenue. Nothing in it specifies only tier 1. It does reference two 2016 ESPN contracts, one of which is the one thst established the ACC network, the payout structure, and the opt out option (that the ACC office granted an extension to 2025 during COVID). Unfortunately, that contract is not publicly available, though a heavily redacted version was released that confirms the existence of the ESPN opt out.
Given that the contract between Cal and the ACC references 'media' with no mention of just Tier 1, and other sources like the nbc sports one you reference are claiming only tier one without the actual agreement in front of them I'd have to say Wilner seems more reliable here. Any article (like the nbc one) that cites a 70% reduction is suspect as the agreement Wilner attained clearly spells out 67%. While it doesn't help now, it will be obvious what the media revenue is when Cal releases their 2024-25 financial statements.
Quoted from the agreement:
"Media revenue shall mean all revenue generated and distributed from (i) the Amended and restated Multi-Media Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN, Inc., ESPN Enterprises, Inc. (collectively referred to as "ESPN") and the Conference … and (ii) the Network Agreement, dated July 21, 2016, by and among ESPN and the Conference, as amended from time to time (collectively with the Multi-Media Agreement, the "Media Rights Agreements").
Another issue this raises is if ESPN opts out, and the ACC remains intact at some level with Cal and Stanford included, would the 67% 'donation' still apply since the contract mentioned in the agreement would be scrapped?
Would be interesting if Wilner or another media type could FOIA the GOR Cal signed with the AC to determine if it lasts through 2036 or it only tied to the ESPN deal, however long they chose that to last. Could be a further financial catastrophe to be tied to the ACC through 2036 with a reduced contract, or it might be a bit more lucrative if it would pay 100% of the reduced amount.
What conferences call tier 1, 2 and 3 media rights "varies among conferences" (which I view as main contract with linear TV as tier 1, conference network as tier 2 and streaming and any other stuff as tier 3). The ACC considers there is only 1 tier since ESPN owns all broadcasting rights, period. Any other content that comes from other sources is produced under a sublease from ESPN (e.g., Raycom). So I guess everyone, including reporters that put out all those misleading articles, didn't appreciate how the ACC labels their rights. Obviously the sources that were leaking what the deal was going to be didn't appreciate the ACC nomenclature either. The ACC did not respond to my question was to why 67% versus the reported 70%, which makes sense if you think about it. So I hope that clarifies.
You would have to dig into the details to understand the UUAL and whether or not the assumptions are "aggressive" or not. Some of the biggest (negative) changes to the CALPERS numbers, for example, are a decision to stop making up aggressive numbers to avoid having to increase contribution.Oski87 said:So the total pension liability is therefore somewhere in the 20 billion dollar range, and so the 1.5 billion is fixed with a slight change in the interest rate over the next 40 years.BearSD said:Just to comment on (2) here: UC Berkeley's financial reports indicate that the annual retiree pension and health benefits paid out are more than $430 million. The projected unfunded future liability for pensions alone, not including health benefits, is more than $1.5 billion.socaltownie said:
The interesting thing is that (for the CEO) it really shouldn't be. Here are just four of the the "existential" crisises that actually go WAY in front of what the AD is doing (though I understand that the Chronical of Higher Ed is an acquired taste)....
1) Demographic cliff. Colleges are about done with dealing with babyboom kids and now face an enrollment lull until their grandkids become college age. This is particularly pronounced outside of the sunbelt and is particularly concerning for all but the flagships. There are a number of "power conference" schools that face that, including in our new conference schools like NC State and Clemson.
2) Legacy costs/unfunded benefits. Retiree healthcare and pensions are really the thing that keeps University Presidents up at night as, like the US, our retirement system isn't set up for people living into their 90s (and beyond). Most universities (cal included) have large unfunded liabilities. Unlike the feds, they can't print money.
Econ141 said:
I don't want to subscribe to mercury news for one article so am wondering if anyone here who is able to access this link summarize Wilner's thoughts on a super league and ACC?
https://www.mercurynews.com/2024/08/16/mailbag-likelihood-of-a-super-league-or-super-teams-acc-sustainability-the-cfps-future-wsu-and-osu-revenue-sharing-and-more/?utm_email=B49FF4D443F093986342F3764F&lctg=B49FF4D443F093986342F3764F&active=no&utm_source=listrak&utm_medium=email&utm_term=https%3a%2f%2fwww.mercurynews.com%2f2024%2f08%2f16%2fmailbag-likelihood-of-a-super-league-or-super-teams-acc-sustainability-the-cfps-future-wsu-and-osu-revenue-sharing-and-more%2f&utm_campaign=bang-mult-nl-wilner-hotline-nl&utm_content=manual
Thank you
Well, if Notre Dame counts as an ACC team then it's obviously them first. Then I think UNC.calumnus said:
5. I think if the B1G could take an ACC team it would be Miami, not FSU or Clemson.
sycasey said:Well, if Notre Dame counts as an ACC team then it's obviously them first. Then I think UNC.calumnus said:
5. I think if the B1G could take an ACC team it would be Miami, not FSU or Clemson.
The very top of the Big Ten's list is, for sure, ND then UNC.sycasey said:Well, if Notre Dame counts as an ACC team then it's obviously them first. Then I think UNC.calumnus said:
5. I think if the B1G could take an ACC team it would be Miami, not FSU or Clemson.
calumnus said:
1. The minimum sports for ACC are Football, Men's and Women's Basketball and Women's Soccer. I think Cal and Stanford move most of the other (surviving) sports to a western regional conference.
2. Florida does not want Florida State in the SEC.
3. Wilner acts like the conferences call the shots. ESPN does not want Florida State in the SEC and they control the dollars.
4. Trying to leave the ACC to go to the Big 12 does not make sense. For one, they pay less. They just traded Texas and Oklahoma for Utah, Colorado, Arizona and Arizona State. They overlap territories and time zones with the B1G and SEC. They have less tradition as a conference. They seem to be on a weaker position than the ACC, though I guess if FSU and Clemson could magically join them it would top the balance the other way.
5. I think if the B1G could take an ACC team it would be Miami, not FSU or Clemson.
6. Once the expanded CFPs take hold there will be less pressure for Super Conferences. Clemson and Florida State will figure out that the ACC is a better path to consistent post season appearances and $$$.
7. Even if superconferences form, they (like all professional leagues do) will naturally split into regional divisions. The natural split is North, South, East and West.
8. UCLA will eventually play at Sofi, 10 minutes from campus on the 405 and much closer to its alumni base on the Westside. The Rose Bowl will likely be torn down and replaced with a housing development.