Friday Afternoon Expansion Talk

Lots of (opinionated) discussion on the SFN Forums about the inevitable next round of college football expansion and realignment, and more precisely, how it will affect State. So go on over there and join the fun, and it’s likely you’ll even win a $100 Walmart gift card, or maybe one of the few remaining ipads.

We already knew Texas A&M was considering SEC membership, but now Florida State is “flirting” with the SEC, and possibly others from the ACC as well. LRM writes that he is impressed Texas A&M is being proactive about its future, and adds that eventually the ACC and Big East will be forced to react in order to remain relevant to major college football.

With that in mind, here’s an interesting insight into how the conferences are viewing this (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette):

Athletic directors Steve Pederson of Pitt, Oliver Luck of West Virginia and Tim Pernetti of Rutgers have their opinion and are leading a push to expand the Big East Conference’s football membership to 12 teams. They believe the league can get a big boost in broadcast rights fees next year, largely because Comcast has bought NBC and actively is searching for college sports programming for the Versus Network, which will become NBC Sports Network.

That means there are more suitors now — and with only one major conference left without a long-term deal — the Big East — that can offer programming, the price has just gone up.

Under the current combined football/basketball TV contract that expires in 2013, Big East football members get $11 million annually, far less than the $20 to $23 million annually the Pac-12, Big Ten and SEC members get from their combined football/basketball deals. ACC members get about $14 million from their combined contract.

Big East commissioner John Marinatto said there were mixed feelings about turning down ESPN’s deal initially — and the divide was pretty much between the so-called basketball members and the football members — but the announcement of the Pac-12’s lucrative deal ($3 billion over 12 years) convinced them all it was the right move.

“The [price of programming] dramatically changed when the Pac-12 announced its deal,” Marinatto said. “And we were unanimous. There was splintering before that, but, on that day, we were unanimous ‘we’re walking away.’ College football has firmly been implanted as the No. 2 most popular sport.

Keep in mind that the commissioners are approaching this as a business. Forget “best fit” and team names; rivalries, traditions, geography, and cultures don’t matter. What matters is whether or not the revenue per school for 14 or 16 teams is greater than it is for 12. If the answer is yes, then you will see expansion, and soon.

About LRM

Charter member of the Lunatic Fringe and a fan, loyal to a fault.

ACC ACC & Other Athletics Directors

32 Responses to Friday Afternoon Expansion Talk

  1. whitefang 08/13/2011 at 11:59 AM #

    If that happened we are done. But of those 4 they only added 2 TV markets.
    For all Clemson’s football history and fan base they are a small school in a small market.
    If this is truly about TV money I can’t see how they make sense.

  2. bigwolfpacker 08/13/2011 at 12:02 PM #

    If you are coming up with a combined ACC/Big East dont include Penn St. They arent leaving the Big Ten. That however does look like the logical step for the ACC. Hopefully we would be able to get Syracuse, Pitt, in addition to WVU, UCONN, Rutgers, S fla maybe, etc. I dont mind losing FSU but I hate losing Clemson. Clemson and S Car. should be in ACC.

  3. Dogbreath 08/13/2011 at 12:03 PM #

    Four land-grant schools added to the SEC and we are left holding our dick in our hands. Thanks for 30 years of dogshit leadership at our school.

  4. Gene 08/13/2011 at 12:19 PM #

    ESPN just had a crawl that Texas A&M to the SEC is a done deal, with FSu, Clemson and Missouri as likely to follow.

    I think the ACC and Big East need get into talks about merging FAST.

    NCSU
    UNC
    Duke
    Wake Forest
    Virgnia
    Maryland
    Ga. Tech
    UConn
    W.Va.
    Pitt
    Boston College
    Louisville
    Cincinnati
    Syracuse
    USF
    Rutgers

    That’s 16 teams, with a decent mix of pretty good football programs and good basketball schools. Geographically, it’s fairly contiguous, with only a four non-east coast outliers, in W.Va., Louisville, Cincinnati and Syracuse.

    The non-football schools that were in the Big East – St. John’s, Georgetown, Villanova, Seton Hall, etc. – can form their own basketball only conference and take Notre Dame with them.

    Big East football wasn’t doing anything for them anyways.

  5. packpowerfan 08/13/2011 at 12:45 PM #

    ^kick out BC, since you left VT off. They won’t go anywhere without UVA.

  6. Dogbreath 08/13/2011 at 12:46 PM #

    Good luck pulling Swofford’s drunk, fat ass off of Finley golf course to deal with this on a Saturday.

  7. Gene 08/13/2011 at 2:02 PM #

    Thanks for the correction packpowerfan. Hadn’t realized I left off Va. Tech.

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