The ACC schools all want out of the ACC & Virginia and North Carolina are set to be an expansion battleground for the SEC & Big Ten. Dive in: https://t.co/rzGk2kv65M
— Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) July 19, 2022
The ACC schools all want out of the ACC & Virginia and North Carolina are set to be an expansion battleground for the SEC & Big Ten. Dive in: https://t.co/rzGk2kv65M
— Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) July 19, 2022
Presumably, schools could file to seek a declaratory judgment, asking the court to rule the GOR is void (or voidable). Or at least that the exit fees are not permitted.bear2be2 said:
I'll believe this when someone challenges the GOR deal in court. Until then, this is just silly speculation.
As a lawyer, do you see any reasonable grounds on which these contracts could be voided? I saw another lawyer say they're not ironclad, but they're strong enough to deter most from challenging the issue in court.BearlyBeloved said:Presumably, schools could file to seek a declaratory judgment, asking the court to rule the GOR is void (or voidable). Or at least that the exit fees are not permitted.bear2be2 said:
I'll believe this when someone challenges the GOR deal in court. Until then, this is just silly speculation.
This is a safer legal course that breaking away from the ACC and taking the risk of having to pay exorbitant damages or exit fees.
(Yes, I'm a lawyer.)
I hate to break this to you, but an "assignment" IS a form of contract.tcbear said:
I am sorry to keep harping on this, but the GoR is not a contract. It is a term assignment of intellectual property. The assignment or conveyance to the conference has been fully completed, so there is no contract to be enforced or avoided. The effect of the previous grant of rights has nothing to do with enforcing or breaking an ongoing contract.
And, asserting a declaratory judgment claim that the previous assignment was somehow void does not necessarily speed up the litigation process. If there are fact issues involved - and there almost certainly are - it will take months or years to fully resolve the issue.
In short, because the GoR does not involve the enforcement or breach of a contract, it is extremely difficult to undo. There is a reason UT and OU have not done anything legally to try to avoid the GoR, and a reason Clemson is still in the ACC and not the SEC.
I am serious. And don't call me Shirley.tcbear said:
Are you serious Bearly? Surely you are not an attorney
LagunaBear said:
What is the conference dissolves, like they were hoping would happen to the Big 12? (Assume 8 or so teams line up a landing spot they like among B1G, SEC and Big 12 and all want to leave. Wouldn't the conference just dissolve, and therefore, there's no GOR because there's no conference)
PartyBear said:
I'm not sure any of them are valuable enough to expand the pie for the SEC or BiG. Are y'all suggesting they want to blow their conference up to get into the XII? I'm not sure about that one.
I wouldn't be quite so sure. I think it's likely that Clemson and Florida State end up in the SEC, but I wouldn't call it a lock.BylrFan said:PartyBear said:
I'm not sure any of them are valuable enough to expand the pie for the SEC or BiG. Are y'all suggesting they want to blow their conference up to get into the XII? I'm not sure about that one.
Clemson is a solid lock for the SEC. If it's not noticed by now, it's every team to itself. FSU/UNC/UVA is up for debate but money wise, they're going to be behind the Big 12 And double behind the B10/SEC.
bear2be2 said:I wouldn't be quite so sure. I think it's likely that Clemson and Florida State end up in the SEC, but I wouldn't call it a lock.BylrFan said:PartyBear said:
I'm not sure any of them are valuable enough to expand the pie for the SEC or BiG. Are y'all suggesting they want to blow their conference up to get into the XII? I'm not sure about that one.
Clemson is a solid lock for the SEC. If it's not noticed by now, it's every team to itself. FSU/UNC/UVA is up for debate but money wise, they're going to be behind the Big 12 And double behind the B10/SEC.
Brand-wise, Clemson is closer to Oregon than Texas, Oklahoma or USC, and this is largely borne out in the ratings numbers.
Clemson only drew an average of 1.74 million viewers per game last year. That's a really good number. But it's not necessarily a must add for a league that will need to them to bring in $100-plus million in added revenue to increase the conference's per-school value.
If Clemson can get back to being a perennial title contender, that viewership number will go up -- they averaged a more blue blood-like 2.67 million viewers from 2015-19. But the gap between those numbers shows the difference between a Clemson and a Texas, Oklahoma or Notre Dame, which will draw 2-plus million viewers in their bad years. Clemson has a higher ceiling than most, but its viewership -- like Oregon's and most other schools -- is still relatively dependent on its on-field performance.
My point is that Clemson's matchups only draw blue blood ratings when they're a national title contender.BylrFan said:bear2be2 said:I wouldn't be quite so sure. I think it's likely that Clemson and Florida State end up in the SEC, but I wouldn't call it a lock.BylrFan said:PartyBear said:
I'm not sure any of them are valuable enough to expand the pie for the SEC or BiG. Are y'all suggesting they want to blow their conference up to get into the XII? I'm not sure about that one.
Clemson is a solid lock for the SEC. If it's not noticed by now, it's every team to itself. FSU/UNC/UVA is up for debate but money wise, they're going to be behind the Big 12 And double behind the B10/SEC.
Brand-wise, Clemson is closer to Oregon than Texas, Oklahoma or USC, and this is largely borne out in the ratings numbers.
Clemson only drew an average of 1.74 million viewers per game last year. That's a really good number. But it's not necessarily a must add for a league that will need to them to bring in $100-plus million in added revenue to increase the conference's per-school value.
If Clemson can get back to being a perennial title contender, that viewership number will go up -- they averaged a more blue blood-like 2.67 million viewers from 2015-19. But the gap between those numbers shows the difference between a Clemson and a Texas, Oklahoma or Notre Dame, which will draw 2-plus million viewers in their bad years. Clemson has a higher ceiling than most, but its viewership -- like Oregon's and most other schools -- is still relatively dependent on its on-field performance.
Clemson will get better matchups and bigger ratings draw by playing Ohio State,USC,Michigan, Penn State or Texas,OU, Bama, Georgia + others compared to what they have scheduled now.
It really doesn't matter about team performance much, just look at UT this past decade. But lucrative matchups are key with Clemson being one of ESPN's favorites.
Even to the point of Dabo becoming self aware
https://www.tigernet.com/clemson-football/story/swinney-on-conference-realignment-most-people-know-where-college-football-is-heading-20542
2022 ACC Media Days: What to expect from Clemson, Miami and outlook amid conference realignment https://t.co/BnPjajfmEh pic.twitter.com/1NYF2wpknp
— College Football (@CollegeFootball) July 19, 2022
ACC commissioner Jim Phillips: "I don't expect us in September when we get together to line up and announce a new CFP structure."
— James Crepea (@JamesCrepea) July 20, 2022
There is no incentive for SEC to act on CFP post-2026 before Aug. 2, 2024, when the Pac-12 could disintegrate.
Phillips talking about the "two Pac-12 schools" moving to the Big 10. Says while the ACC is strong, they're constantly exploring options.
— emily leiker (@emleiker) July 20, 2022
"All options must be carefully evaluated."
[/url]Jim Phillips on rumors of Pac 12 teams coming to the ACC: "While the ACC is strong, we will continue to evaluate all options that will further strengthen our conference."
— Joe Marino (@TheJoeMarino) July 20, 2022
BearlyBeloved said:
It will be so fun to watch these "major powers" devolve into perennial losers when they're all in the same conference. Watch their ratings take a nose dive when that happens.
Brent Venables called out Oklahoma football fans to make the 2022 Spring Game a great atmosphere, and they did just that.chriscbear said:
Honestly UT or OU draw like 1.4 to 1.6 million viewers on average on their own. Remember part of the viewers are fans of the other team. Yes sometimes 2 million are UT etc fans but there are BU games with better ratings than a UT or OU game.
Aliceinbubbleland said:Brent Venables called out Oklahoma football fans to make the 2022 Spring Game a great atmosphere, and they did just that.chriscbear said:
Honestly UT or OU draw like 1.4 to 1.6 million viewers on average on their own. Remember part of the viewers are fans of the other team. Yes sometimes 2 million are UT etc fans but there are BU games with better ratings than a UT or OU game.
A hyped-up crowd of 75,360 strong showed up and out at the Palace not for a regular season game, but a spring game. It was the largest spring game attendance in the country, and easily the largest ever to attend an OU spring game.
They'll never have to worry about viewership and I have never seen UT's stadium "half empty" as someone posted above. To argue otherwise is crazy.
Yes but the implication was half empty all the time. Most stadiums are half empty by 4th quarter unless it is a tight, meaningful game and even then some are half empty.historian said:Aliceinbubbleland said:Brent Venables called out Oklahoma football fans to make the 2022 Spring Game a great atmosphere, and they did just that.chriscbear said:
Honestly UT or OU draw like 1.4 to 1.6 million viewers on average on their own. Remember part of the viewers are fans of the other team. Yes sometimes 2 million are UT etc fans but there are BU games with better ratings than a UT or OU game.
A hyped-up crowd of 75,360 strong showed up and out at the Palace not for a regular season game, but a spring game. It was the largest spring game attendance in the country, and easily the largest ever to attend an OU spring game.
They'll never have to worry about viewership and I have never seen UT's stadium "half empty" as someone posted above. To argue otherwise is crazy.
In 2014, Texas Memorial Stadium was half empty in the 4th quarter while Baylor was giving them a total shellacking. We won 28-7 & it was a shutout with 3 minutes left. My big regret from that game is that I didn't take photos of that near empty Stadium. It was beautiful!!