The Latest News From FSU Only Underlines The Disaster That Is John Swofford

Seems that this time there really is fire beneath the smoke coming from blogs and message boards: Florida State is not happy with its current situation in the Atlantic Coast Conference, something that had been rumored for years.  Even worse, there is some very real sentiment in Tallahassee to leave the ACC – possibly making FSU the first school to depart  in over 41 years.  By no means do the Seminoles have one foot out the door — not yet anyway — but the simple fact that there is any serious discussion of it happening can only mean one thing: there are real problems and there is real discontent with the state of things in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

The real question that no one in the mainstream media seem to want to raise in this latest college sports soap opera is this: doesn’t this rumbling also make the ground beneath John Swofford’s feet lot shakier too?  Is he not the leader of the conference?  Is he not the man who has led the ACC for some time, and has led the ACC to a place where a blue-chip name like Florida State (and presumably others too) are at least entertaining the idea of finding a new league to call home?

Swofford’s decisions of late have been a cornucopia of headscratchers:   his new and better deal with ESPN has left the ACC playing second-fiddle to the SEC in terms of national television exposure via the four-letter network.  Sure the ACC has a lot of games across the scattered platforms ESPN offers, etc., but the truth is that the SEC has a better product right now, and given that the ACC and the SEC share a place on the same spots on the dial, it’s a no-brainer that ESPN will give its best timeslots on its flagship channel to the SEC.  The ACC, well, it can count on a lot of its games being shown on the second-rate ESPN-U or online only through its Internet feeds.

The timing of that decision is somewhat curious too: Fox Sports is about to launch a national sports network to compete with ESPN, and CBS and NBC have already re-purposed some of the cable properties to do the same.  Fox in particular will be very hungry for college sports programming, and the ACC would have been an extremely attractive property for them.  CBS and NBC certainly wouldn’t have minded having the ACC either, and it’s not like those two companies are third-tier part-time broadcast networks either.

One has to wonder: did Swofford and company leave lots of money laying on the table by extending the ACC’s role as second fiddle on ESPN?  Seems like FSU might think so.  If so, they’re right to do so.

Swofford  done damage elsewhere too: is he not the man whose tenure has seen the death of one of the ACC’s best college hoops traditions, namely the home-and-home round-robin where everyone played everyone else at home and one the road?  With this new and improved deal with ESPN our conference schedule will be part decided by ESPN.  That’s a real fair way to settle who the best regular season team is — by having Dick Vitale’s boss decide what matchups can get better ratings because some teams are more popular and than others.

Then there’s the deafening silence from the top about the conference’s officiating — and thus its competitive integrity — called into question in the national media on more than one occasion.  The ACC has gotten a reputation where its top two perennial hoops powers will get more than the benefit of the doubt from the referees, and it’s not one propped up by lunatics on message boards.  Instead, this is a perception that thoughtful sports columnists who have no dog in the fight in the games themselves have started to foster.  There’s something rotten in Denmark, and instead of getting in front of the problem of a declining reputation, Swofford has said and done…nothing.

Then there is the whole conference expansion issue: while other conferences are adding large schools with huge fanbases, we’re adding television markets to the ACC.  That might seem to be a smart thing to do, but the problem with many of the TV markets added is that they markets dominated by pro sports teams.  Really, how many days a year does Boston College make more noise in the Bay State than the Red Sox, the Patriots, the Celtics or the Bruins?  How many days a year will Syracuse football get more play in New York City than the post-season efforts of the Yankees or the latest Rex Ryan diatribe after the Jets are pummeled by the Eagles?  In Pittsburgh, things are a little bit better, but make no mistake, it’s a Steelers and a Penguins town first and foremost.

Thinking it through, it’s easy to see why FSU might be looking around.  The ACC has a leadership deficit and that leadership might well be leading the stories league towards relative irrelevancy.   So let’s call it what it is: by most any measure, unless you are UNC and Duke, Swofford has been a disaster for the ACC.  He’s killing  its hoops tradition.  He’s expanded conference membership to benefit football in questionable markets with second-tier teams all for a title game that has largely been sparsely attended because its sites were poorly chosen.  He’s made financial decisions that leave important schools like FSU thinking it can get a better deal with the Big XII, which to me is C-USA version 2.0.

If anything, FSU should demand a new commissioner not so obviously aligned with one of the other member institutions.  And oh yeah, competent besides.  Otherwise, they’re wise to take a look around.  And back here at home, it may be a good idea for NC State to also start looking at its own options.  At the very least, one of those options should be a new leader in the ACC.

ACC ACC & Other ACC Teams Athletics Directors

30 Responses to The Latest News From FSU Only Underlines The Disaster That Is John Swofford

  1. wolfbuff 05/14/2012 at 4:19 PM #

    “There probably won’t be a peep out of John Swofford about this.”

    I wonder if ol’ Bill Friday will weigh in. He felt compelled to weigh in with the athletic scandal that we should just move on. Should we just move on now that academic fraud has been found, Bill? Or is this just another rogue person?

  2. FuquayWolf 05/14/2012 at 4:46 PM #

    I’m no fan of Uncle Johnnie Swoff, and I hate for people to even think I’m defending him. That said, it’s my understanding that the ACC didn’t have much choice other than accept an extension from ESPN this go round. We’re currently under contract with ESPN, and I believe that the current contract had a clause that we could re-negotiate the deal if new members were added. I don’t think it was an “opt-out” clause, i.e. we added new teams, so we can opt-out of the current deal. Only an “opt-out” clause would have allowed us to put our rights back up on the open market, to be bid on by ESPN, Fox, NBC/Comcast, and/or CBS. Essentially, our choices were to a) renegotiate our current contract based on the addition of Pitt/Syracuse from a position of weakness vis-a-vis ESPN’s position; or b) play out our existing crappy contract and divide the pot 14 ways instead of 12, thereby lowering the payout to each school. We chose to get more money per school and a longer contract vs. less money per school and a shorter contract.

    Now, you can blame the Swoff for signing us up for that current contract, but at the time it was signed, it a) seemed like a great deal, and b) the conference realignment merry-go-round wasn’t quite on the horizon. Also, those that point out that the Swoff’s negotiating power this go-round was minimized by the ACC’s lackluster football inventory, are spot on. This is due in no small part to the fact that FSU quit playing like FSU, Miami quit playing like Miami, and Clemson perpetually failing to reclaim its former Danny Ford-era glory. Had at least FSU and Miami lived up to historical billing, we could have gotten more money. Instead, the ACC can basically offer up only VT, a solid but not spectacular program (never a serious contender for a MNC). Neither FSU or Miami has sniffed the BCS in years, and Clemson’s lasting 2011 memory was that butt-whuppin’ WVU laid on them.

    All that said, the majority of the remainder of Alpha’s post is spot on. It’s long past time for the Swoff to go. Even if he’s not biased, he sure as hell appears so. He seems to generally be reactionary instead of forward thinking. So let’s hassle the Swoff right on into retirement, and replace that Tar Hole homer with an independent, unbiased, innovative leader, ala Larry Scott for the Pac-12.

  3. wolfmanmat 05/14/2012 at 5:54 PM #

    Swoff has a tough job..and he’s bad at it, but still a tough job. Biggest problem with ACC currently is that we have and will continue to have 3-4 schools that command no audience at all in football and aren’t really worthy of even being on TV in football ever…even if playing a top 10 team. Sorry Wake, BC and Duke, but that’s true. UNC/UVa are about the same in football too. So, we have 4 high profile programs in VT/Miami/FSU/Clemson and 2-3 middle of the road NCSU/Maryland/GT types. With FSU/Miami down recently, there’s no “big sell” like in the SEC or Big 12 where you at least get 1-2 top 7 teams every year and can hype a couple matchups. Our best games have been boardline top 15 squads, so we don’t ever have the big matchup to sell in football. So, the ACC must decide; either be about football and try to keep FSU/Clemson/etc happy, or just realize that your tradition is basketball and just market yourself as the best basketball conference and forget it.

  4. Wolf74 05/14/2012 at 6:27 PM #

    Hey don’t be upset with ole John. He has done what he does best, be a UNC-CHeats homer. He played there, he was AD there, he went in front of the NCAA and supported the cheaters, he like the ACC referees because they keep the holes relevant, if he had pressed any for additional sanctions on the CHeaters the ACC would have voted for that. So don’t hammer John as he has done exactly what was expected of him – support the CHeats. Once a CHeater, always a CHeater.

  5. timswar 05/15/2012 at 9:02 AM #

    I wonder if FSU is pissed about the swift an harshish punishment for their womens’ soccer team’s minor issue when compared to the amazing amout if foot dragging before issuing a weak statement over UNC’s major infractions.

    It would be pretty irritating to me if that had happened to an NCSU squad.

    /Im trying to figure out whose academic cheating scandal was worse. FSU players cheated on tests, but at least it looks like there were actual classes attached to those tests. And it’s beginning to look like the number of athletes potentially involved is comparable.

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