bear2be2 said:
FLBear5630 said:
bear2be2 said:
FLBear5630 said:
EatMoreSalmon said:
FLBear5630 said:
bear2be2 said:
FLBear5630 said:
Aliceinbubbleland said:
FLBear5630 said:
EatMoreSalmon said:
Show me what makes Finebaum a good prognosticator, and maybe I'll consider what he says. His record for accuracy that I recall isn't very good.
Anything can happen right now in the college football world. My prediction (about as valuable as Finebaum's) is the the B1G and SEC will get something together and go their own way - dumping the NCAA while they're at it.
It is a report from a SEC mouthpiece. Or, because we don't like what he says is Finebaum now considered "clickbait"?
Finebaum, like him or not, is well connected in the SEC and puts out the message the SEC wants. This makes my wonder does the SEC want the ACC to win out as the third conference? You weren't surprised to see the ACC in there??
As I have said all along, the people on this board seem to think the B12 is in a stronger position than it appears when looking at what is happening in the rest of the Nation. I fear that when the music stops we will look more like an AAC Conference than a P5 Conference. For example, adding UCONN and Memphis. None of the corner schools making a move yet. Talking BB as if it is Football. Those are all actions that made the Big East become the AAC.
Agree 100%. I believe ESPN is a co-owner of SEC Network so Finebaum has inside information on SEC and ESPN.
Right now the ACC is in a much stronger market then the soon to be Big 12 minus OUT and appears to have iron clad exit fees.. Clemson, FSU, Miami, Carolina are bigger draws nationally than our soon to be top four in 2024.
I fear the Big 12 will wind up offering SDSU since they have put themselves in a pickle telling their current conference they are leaving and the Pac 12 doesn't appear to dangle an offer. With out expansionist Commishner I have no doubt he might extend the lifeline to SDSU.
Oregon and Washington will be able to hold the Pac12 together and Colorado and Arizona will not leave without them in my opinion.
I am with you.
When the 4 corner schools view the B12 as a last ditch option, that makes me worry. What do they know that the B12 doesn't.
Also, the ACC has more history and better connections than the B12, if only through Tobacco Road. They are not going to be an easy out, especially if the SEC is working with them. I would not doubt that the SEC is supporting the ACC.
In Florida, the ACC is viewed as a southern conference at least in my experience. I can see the SEC and ACC working together. But that is all speculation.
Anyone who thinks Florida State, Clemson, North Carolina, Virginia, Miami, etc. will still be in the ACC when that league's grant of rights expires or is broken hasn't been paying attention. Those schools will bolt for the SEC or Big Ten at the earliest possible opportunity, and the remaining ACC brands will be no more valuable than the Big 12's when it happens.
The Big 12, PAC-12 and ACC are all "leftover" leagues. And the Big 12 is at an extreme advantage because it was forced to make that realization and respond accordingly earlier than the others.
To date the schools that we are attached to for additions are Memphis, SDSU and UCONN.
The corner schools seem to be looking for anything else rather than join the B12, even taking less money.
Sorry, I see the G5. We are making the same moves as the Big East did before they were relegated. Even talking to the same schools.
IMO, we have a tendency on this Board to only see what we want and what certain talking heads push. Not seeing any of the steps needed to make the B12 #3 actually occurring, to the contrary the schools we are talking about our 2nd rate, the P5 schools are doing anything they can NOT to be in the B12, and we are talking BB as if it is fooball, if you are paying attention. Not to mention the media discussions. You really see the B12 being the #3?
Not buying Memphis. SDSU is likely in for the PAC. UCONN is intriguing, but likely not first on the list either.
I am good with that.
I am just not seeing moves that reconcile with the message, while seeing other Conferences either still be around longer than expected or being mentioned by the big two as a third.
Or perhaps you're just misinterpreting the message. The Big 12 just added four non-P5 schools -- three from major metro areas and a fourth with a large religious following -- and added value to its media rights deal. In the absence of name brands, Yormark's mission is about adding territory. The Big 12 is working to expand its footprint into new regions with lots of available eyeballs. When you take that into account, successful G5 programs in major metro areas make a lot more sense.
Could be. Gonna be tough to break into a playoff diluting the quality of play more. When your premier school is OSU or BYU? Adding from G5s seems counter productive. A merger with PAC or ACC would seem more of a move. If SEC is working with ACC, that will be tough.
You're relying more on your biases than data when drawing these conclusions. ESPN and FOX just told us with their wallets that adding the four non-P5 programs we did added value to the league. And the lack of a merger between the Big 12 and PAC-12 should tell us that such a move would be dilutive for the Big 12 schools. If there was money to be made there, that would have been the first move made.
What you are missing is that it takes 2 to make a deal. The B12 can want it, but if the other parties are not interested it doesn't matter. What bothers me is why?
You are right, if the move can make more money it should be accepted by both parties. On the surface it looks like we are in a good position. Yet, the corner schools are not only not jumping, but are willing to take less to not jump. We are talking the UCONNS, Memphis, and SDSU of the world, not the Stanfords, Cal's and Oregon States. So, what are we missing? What is out there that we are undervaluing but the others aren't? That is what bother me.