This should be required reading for everyone who thought the Big Game/Levi's deal was a bad one. To the contrary, it was a great idea that would have substantially benefited Cal.ColoradoBear said:01Bear said:ColoradoBear said:It wouldn't matter which year we pushed back:Sebastabear said:You must be joking. And the reason the offer wasn't repeated the following year when the Big Game was scheduled for Stanford? I mean obviously it was such a fantastic idea I can't possibly imagine why Stanford didn't volunteer to "push back" their game a year.71Bear said:Your comment is rather disingenuous. In fact, LSJU asked Cal to push the Big Game that was scheduled at Berkeley back one year (thus pushing back the next Big Game scheduled for Stanford by one year also). This would have balanced the schedule for BOTH schools. Cal made a stupid mistake by not accepting the offer. Typical.........Sebastabear said:To be clear, we said no because they were asking us to give up a Cal Big Game to play at Levi's. If they want to give up the Stanford Big Game to play on a neutral field (or play back to back Big Games in Berkeley) I think they'd get a different answer.Bobodeluxe said:Yes, and Stanford asked us to correct the scheduling imbalance for both schools, but WE SAID NO!wifeisafurd said:Don't disagree with your last sentence that in the long run that is what matters.dajo9 said:
HYBNew tax laws provide a good excuse for lots of things. Methinks the real reason is all the empty seats we see on a regular basis in the fall. If the stands were full they wouldn't be lowering prices, no matter the tax law changes. Supply and demand always prevails.
Two qualifications regarding your Methinks however: First, Furd dropped prices in areas that are sold out, like boxes, and the percentage drop appears to be tied to marginal tax rates. Second, Furd has a cyclical attendance issue. They sell out (or nearlysell out) most games in years which the Big Game, Note Dame Udub, and Oregon are visiting, which is in the same year, and have empty seats the following year. Cal btw has a similar problem though to a lesser degree since our out of conference schedule is being dumbed down, rather than having a Notre Dame draw at home every other year.
Case 1: 2014@ levis, 2015@ Cal, 2016@ Furd, repeat
Case 2: 2014 @ Cal, 2015 @ Levi's, 2016@ Furd, repeat
I wouldn't want to pursue pushing it back now because we don't know what will happen with the p12 schedule at the next media contract negotiation. Maybe we lose the 9 game conf schedule and/or the LA yearly games? Maybe the p12 expands. Then you potentially reshuffled the BG for nothing.
was case 2 offered? or was case 1 the only offer?
either way, what would cal got out if helping the furd balance its schedule?
not sure if Case 2 was offered. And it doesn't actually matter, as my point was there would be no difference between the two, so when the reshuffle happens is not a good reason for declining it.
And in fact, Case 1 would have benefited Cal more than Case 2 because we get hit by the odd/even year imbalance too. So case 1 would have fixed the imbalance at Cal starting in 2015, while case 2 would have fixed this starting in 2017. Case 1 and 2 would have affected Furd the same as they would get their schedule re-balanced in 2016 either way.
The argument against doing this would be that teams performances are cylical, and USC and Furd have typically been the best drawing games throughout the years. So that means put them in opposite years. But the other thing to note is that UW and Oregon have substantial financial resources over WSU and OSU, so the trend of those games being bigger might actually last a while. It's also worth noting that the even/odd issue really only manifested itself in 2005 when the 12th CFB game was approved on a yearly basis. Before that, the PX played 8 conference games with the 4 CA games guaranteed, so there was a rotation which CA schools we played @ home versus away (as in one was skipped every year).