We sold our soul to ESPN. No coincidence financials behind the mega deal were never released.
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We sold our soul to ESPN. No coincidence financials behind the mega deal were never released.
Nailed it.
ESPN desperately needs a legitimate competitor. Never thought I'd see a day where a ****ing TV network runs the sports world. ESPN wants a coach fired? He's fired. ESPN wants a coach hired? He's hired. ESPN cries foul at lack of minority hiring? Rooney Rule. Whatever the **** ESPN wants, ESPN gets because everyone is scared of the power they wield. And for all their meddling, the on-field products aren't improved.
If Florida is upset about playing FSU and having 9 conference games they can leave the conference and/or quit playing FSU. To require us to play a tenth tough game is BS.
Ole Miss's 2 win season will not seem like such an anomaly in a few years. Mizzu, Vandy, UT, Kentucky, OM, & State are screwed. If they place this much control iver the schedule and don't leave the NCAA, people should boycott. They're ruining the game.
Bingo! Whatever you do, protect the brand. The Masters takes less money from CBS but the Augusta National runs the show and does what is best for the Masters. CBS cares about CBS, Augusta National cares about the Masters.
Great leadership cares more about protecting the brand than kissing ESPN's butt.
More lousy leadership from Slive...a man who thinks Larry Templeton is smart.
Good lord this is bs. If we have to play 9 SEC games there should be no restrictions on non conference games. Keeping a good coach will even be harder now.
But a nine game conference schedule removes 7 games from the number of possible games being broadcast. I'd rather have seen an acc-sec challenge for football.
Still far, far from a done deal.Quote:
Chuck Dunlap ?@SEC_Chuck 9m
RT @jonsol Slive: 6-1-1 football scheduling format is still likely for 2015. Ongoing discussion about scheduling.
This is the worst news I've had today, and I blew out my tire driving down the road today.
What is the reason why people in the SEC want this so bad? What benefits are they claiming this does for us? Do schools make that much more off of conference games, that it's worth it to give the conference about 4-7 more losses per season?
I dont see the SEC going to 9 conference games at all because of money. Having 9 SEC games means seven more losses for teams, and there are already teams barely getting to bowl eligibility. Less bowl teams means less money and prestige for the SEC. Could be wrong but dont see this happening.
Agree with Paul, but I do think they may limit the FCS games going forward to help with TV ratings. No more cupcakes is a lot better than a 9th SEC game though. They also need to think about TV ratings in SEC markets. Games against non-BCS opponents can still be relevant in some large markets (Houston, Memphis, USF, Central Florida, etc...). If they want to generate more viewers, there's creative ways to do that without risking the dominance of the conference by making everyone play a ridiculous schedule.
I don't see it happening either. A bunch of people jumping the gun in assumptions on this one based on some secondhand tweets. We already know for sure that Florida and Georgia are voting it down -- as are MSU, OM, Vandy, Kentucky, and Mizzou. They can't pass anything with 7(or fewer) votes.
ESPN does not have the power to force a 9-conference game schedule down our throats -- nor do I see how it would help them, since they essentially lose a half-dozen games of overall inventory. People shouldn't be getting hung up on the fact that "espn owns the SEC network" -- because the SEC retained full rights to ALL the content -- thus why it's actually a full 50-50 partnership. They own the channel -- we own the content. We absolutely did not sell our souls in this deal -- and the reason that the $$ figure hasn't been disclosed is because no one has a dang clue what it will be worth yet. That will depend on who picks it up, to what extent, and how quickly...
I think we keep the 8-game conference schedule and work out scheduling alliances with other conferences to balance the nonconference SOS and add the inventory that ESPN wants. In that way, I could see them strongly suggesting more prime OOC games -- particularly with the ACC, which is also an ESPN-exclusive partner, while the B1G and Big12 are Fox partners, thus necessitating "sharing" profits in series against those schools...
The article that came out this week quoting Scott stricklin as the chairman of the committee to improve sec attendance (no idea what the actual name was) made this suggestion, among other ways to improve game day experiences. I don't know what the pros are necessarily for the conference, but I wouldn't assume espn is behind it.
I don't know that it's the worst thing. Obviously when a team is in rebuilding mode it pays to have a pancake schedule and get to a bowl game, but should a team that is 6-6 (2-6) with four wins over Directional State School Tech really be rewarded anyway? I know for me as someone who goes to the games I'm a lot more excited to go to a conference game than a game against the SWAC.
ROGER THAT - def NOT confirmed :
SEC commissioner Mike Slive announced yesterday what everyone expected to him to announced — that his league would head into 2014 with an eight-game conference schedule and a 6-1-1 format. He also said that the 2015 season will “probably” use the same plan.
“Probably” being the key word.
As we’ve noted on numerous occasions, if SEC officials find themselves being snubbed by the College Football Playoff selection committee for strength of schedule reasons, they’ll vote to go to nine games ASAP. If SEC officials see an opportunity to improve attendance and/or make more money by going to nine games, again, they’ll do it.
As for Slive, he says nothing will happen until Friday at the earliest:
“I do want to tell you in capital letters that the First Amendment is alive and well… I just came out of the football coaches’ meeting and we had a healthy discussion there. They’re gonna continue that discussion tomorrow. We had a discussion with our ADs and we’ll continue to have discussions throughout the week. I certainly don’t believe we’ll come to any closure here, but my hope is that everybody will weigh in on the discussion. We’ll see where we are by Friday as to what the next step is.”
There is little chance of a nine-game schedule passing for 2015, 2016 or any other year by Friday. But that didn’t keep a pair of coaches from sounding off on the league’s scheduling issues yesterday.