BarleyMcDougal said:
xiledinok said:
BarleyMcDougal said:
xiledinok said:
BarleyMcDougal said:
xiledinok said:
YoakDaddy said:
xiledinok said:
PartyBear said:
boognish_bear said:
This doesn't seem to be setting off nearly the volume of social media angst that happened when the Canadian Football team tried to hire him as OC. There is certainly some angst....but not at the levels seen the last time.
I'm betting So Miss is about to pull the trigger on the hire and just fade the heat for a few days and move on.
Then once Briles is back in after perhaps only a season, he will be back in play for HC jobs.
Will you be headed to the Southern Piss board to get pumped about C USA football?
After the Big 12 folds in 2024, we're all gonna have to get pumped about C USA football.
This ain't TAPPS. Those tv executives run the show and they are not taking away potential tv markets. Once teams get out of G5, the teams are not getting kicked out of Power 5.
How are they ridding themselves of tv markets by pushing teams to separate conferences? Consolidation isn't dismantling.
They aren't going to dump tv markets. It's more about number of household in states than winning. Nebraska brought very little to tv because it was in a small state.
The Big 12, Disney and Fox aren't relying on the Waco tv market, unfortunately. The Big 12 could easily replace Baylor with Cincinnati or Tulane and it would be business as usual. That's just the truth.
No, that's not how it will work. The networks have partnered with these schools. They aren't turning around and stabbing them in the back. The networks wanted to previously work with Baylor but that would have meant a difficult game added in non conference.
The only thing driving the bus from here on out is revenue from eyeballs, whether that be subscription based or via advertising revenue. There's no "stabbing" anybody in the back, just business. Hopefully Baylor can maintain its standing in a P5.
It appears they will be able to with post season appearances in every sport. I think a Texas market might mean more to tv than a middle America market.
I agree about the revenue issues. Men's basketball is going to face the hardest road with a minor league basketball ball league having a tv contract with 18-22 years as the primary players.