SEC Football Is No Longer Untouchable
Once unstoppable, the league now faces tough questions and dwindling confidence as the Big Ten rises to power.
Hmmmm, If you thought your wallet was getting raided now! Actually there may be quite a bit of money being left behind by advertisers/sponsors.O$U and scUM had better get on board. No longer Big Two and Little Eight.
I just hope all 18 schools get out of their own way and do what's right for the conference.
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Sources: Big Ten discussing $2 billion private capital deal
The Big Ten is in talks about a private capital deal, which includes a 10-year grant of rights extension through 2046, that would infuse at least $2 billion into the league and its schools, sources told ESPN.www.espn.com
O$U and scUM had better get on board. No longer Big Two and Little Eight.
I just hope all 18 schools get out of their own way and do what's right for the conference.
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Sources: Big Ten discussing $2 billion private capital deal
The Big Ten is in talks about a private capital deal, which includes a 10-year grant of rights extension through 2046, that would infuse at least $2 billion into the league and its schools, sources told ESPN.www.espn.com
And so it beginsThey do mentioned the deal could be tiered, which is probably why OSU and Michigan are still in discussions, to get a bigger piece of the pie.
I know what you’re saying , but capital improvements should really be donor funded for the most part .Hmmmm, If you thought your wallet was getting raided now! Actually there may be quite a bit of money being left behind by advertisers/sponsors.
I'm not overly crazy on this part "calls for immediate cash payments to each school, the amount based on a formula that factors in numerous variables including current budgets."
No wonder Whitman said the Illinois budget it approaching 200M.
In reality though, the average IL fan does need to cough up more cashola.
If the big boys just get a much higher total money infusion...I'd have to think long and hard about that.
But, it could provide the needed capital for the renovation.
The highlighted goes against everything the Big Ten has done to date. It could be someone (O$U) who wants this tiered structure is feeding them info for this story. The only inequalities have been with new members (Rutgers, Maryland, Washington & Oregon) but over time they all get equal shares.
I think it is 4) the SEC might so do it first so we'd better keep up / get ahead / get the best deal while we are perceived as the strongest conference.The highlighted goes against everything the Big Ten has done to date. It could be someone (O$U) who wants this tiered structure is feeding them info for this story. The only inequalities have been with new members (Rutgers, Maryland, Washington & Oregon) but over time they all get equal shares.
I still can't quite get my arms around why raising PE money is necessary. I can only think a few reasons why you do this as the Big Ten: 1) you feel the market is frothy and raising money now is better than the future media rights cash flow stream, 2) you need money for a large capital intensive project that you hope will add more value than waiting to fund it in a pay-as-you-go situation, or 3) your investor/partner truly brings something to the table you can't do on your own that adds value so it is worth giving up some ownership.
Cheddar bay biscuits. YumThe B1G is the new Red Lobster.
They do mentioned the deal could be tiered, which is probably why OSU and Michigan are still in discussions, to get a bigger piece of the pie.
My vote would be to take care of the wrestling team and get Coach Poeta a new facility.Enough money for a new Olympic sports/volleyball facility? Maybe even throw in a hockey team? "The amount of those payments is still being discussed, but the basic format, sources told ESPN, is believed to be tiered. All schools in the league are expected to receive at least a nine-figure amount up front." https://www.espn.com/college-sports...ten-discussing-2-billion-private-capital-deal
Bigger brands still need wins if their fan bases are going to expect 11-1 records…With money like this coming in, will some of the smaller brands potentially get removed?
A league of top teams would never make it. Some teams like USC would be at the bottom every year. The SEC has a long history of playing cupcake teams to pad their record and keep their jobs.The only way I can see a tired deal making sense for all is if it were somehow only tied to apparel or other school-specific items—maybe stadium signage, digital deals related to the school's digital footprint, etc, but even that could cause bigger issues down the road.
If it starts to go into tiering the media rights money, it will be a terrible deal for all. By that, I mean creating even more of a revenue gap between the top 3-4 programs and everyone else, making such a competitive gap that it will ruin the product over time.
As stated, even the NFL, NBA, NASCAR, etc, want a relatively even playing field to ensure competitiveness. If this is structured so that OSU, Michigan, Penn State, and Oregon/USC have such an advantage, they may as well create a 10-12 team league with the top SEC schools and play amongst themselves. I get schools getting more revenue based on certain, select things, but this whole thing falls apart without a relatively level playing field to ensure competitive games at some level.
This is the key point. Would VC management want to do anything to sabotage their new product?If it starts to go into tiering the media rights money, it will be a terrible deal for all. By that, I mean creating even more of a revenue gap between the top 3-4 programs and everyone else, making such a competitive gap that it will ruin the product over time.
As stated, even the NFL, NBA, NASCAR, etc, want a relatively even playing field to ensure competitiveness.
This is the key point. Would VC management want to do anything to sabotage their new product?
NFL, NBA, NASCAR, etc insist on strong measures to level the playing field. They do it for business reasons, not out of any sense of fairness. It would be easy to allow or create unbalance and dynasties, but they deliberately work to prevent it. Why would VC see it any differently?