View Full Version : And so it begins
pbiflyer
12-11-2013, 10:16 PM
Is this bad news for the Big East and the end of the NCAA? The big 5 conferences want autonomy.
http://m.espn.go.com/wireless/story?storyId=10121476
MKE_GoldenEagleFan
12-11-2013, 10:26 PM
Ultimately I think football breaks off and does their own thing... Who knows if that happens now or down the road, my only hope is that Basketball gets left alone.
ge1974
12-12-2013, 08:21 AM
If the schools from the 5 major conferences are able to pay players and the rest are not, there will be an uneven playing field. Of course, for recruiting, the best players are pretty much going to go to schools that pay them.
TheSultan
12-12-2013, 08:29 AM
Providing additional payments to students will be more than just football. The Big East is going to have to follow suit as a non-football conference in order to stay competitive.
Football should just break off with the Top 60 teams. It is a very expensive sport and not a profitable one, despite all the revenue. It needs a separate business model so its popularity matches its financial requirements.
Olympic sports are another thing and have been suffering from football's costs and Title IV restrictions for years. Let's take Men's Water Polo which just had its championship. The NCAA bracket schools were USC, UCLA, Stanford...all BCS football. And then there were Pacific, St. Francis, Whittier and UC San Diego. Many of these sports cannot exist without non-BCS schools.
If the Top 60 break off for basketball, in a 30 game schedule, do schools play 50% of the schools every year? The NCAA tournament is 68 teams...so now back to 32 with a good number of BCS teams well under .500? That isn't going to happen as that is a lot of TV revenue from those other games the BCS won't be getting for their win credits as they most typically advance. More likely the compromise is that the field expands in order to create the revenue needed to pay the athletes.
Of course there are Title IV complications. Schools cannot just pay football athletes and not fencing. It would be nice if football scholarships were exempt from Title IV as a compromise and the cutting of Olympic sports prohibited. But that is a federal lawsuit waiting to happen. So, do the BCS schools just cut Olympic sports like Water Polo completely? Could be, but there are a lot of ramifications to feed the Golden Goose of football...and as Delany says, they have nothing to offer.....yet they have money to offer their football players. I suspect the football schools will muck it up just like they did with conference realignment.
MUBasketball
12-12-2013, 09:53 AM
Providing additional payments to students will be more than just football. The Big East is going to have to follow suit as a non-football conference in order to stay competitive.
Will they be able to? It's depressing seeing schools across the country slashing sports due to budget shortages. For many schools, would they have the capability to pay all student athletes (even those in non-revenue sports)?
Goose85
12-12-2013, 10:02 AM
This will be interesting. So let's say the Big 5 want to provide players with a stipend of $500 per month.
Will there be anything preventing schools from the Mountain West / CUSA / American / Big East / Missouri Valley / Horizon / Sun Belt / MAC / etc, from doing the same? If the other five FBS conferences all agree to pay too, will they be able to do so?
Is this just for schollarship athletes, or is it for all athletes? Football may have 85 on schollie, but most big schools have about 110 when adding in walk-ons. Baseball may only allow 12 schollies, but they likey have more than 25 on a team. Same with soccer.
No big deal for most Big East schools most likely, as even $500 per month isn't a killer when you don't have the 100+ football players and offsetting women's schollies.
If the Big 5 leave the NCAA, do those athletic departments lose their non for profit status? Are state school athletes now employees of the state (I sure it would be worded to avoid this one).
What happens if in the next 5 years there is a shift in how people view games and subsequently pay for cable tv? Could TV revenues to conferences decline? Then what happens?
I have no issue with stipends as long as they are reasonable, but I find it funny that the people saying they need to pay stipends are from the large schools that lose money on an annual basis. So, what they are saying is, "we need to be able to lose more money to be competitive"?
Also, their argument is weak, very weak. If they want to say that these kids need to be able to afford to do their laundry, get some things for their dorm room, some clothes - fine. But to say they need to do this to stay competitive? Why are you not competitive now? Aren't you all on the same level playing field? The only reason they want to do this is to keep the Fresno States, the Boise States, the BYUs, the Northern Illinois' and the Nevadas at bay, instead of allowing them into their coveted BCS bowls.
Goose85
12-12-2013, 10:36 AM
What if the big boys say here are the new rules, $300 per athlete per school month (10 months). What if Nevada, Fresno, Boise, for that matter the whole Mountain West and MAC conferences decide they too will pay, then are they included?
If they split, is it only football? If I'm a BCS school with Lax, hockey, baseball, etc then what?
The Badgers have a successful hockey team. They play only 5 other Big 10 schools in hockey this year, one game against BC, that's it for BCS teams. Almost 40% of their scheduled games are against no BCS schools. Who do they play if they split for all things?
If they split for football and hoops, and still expect everyone else to be ok with that, then I hope the non BCS schools say good luck finding other schools to play because we are taking a few years off from scheduling BCS schools in all other sports too.
MKE_GoldenEagleFan
12-12-2013, 11:17 AM
I think you have to open up for everyone to have the option to pay, if a school opts out that's their choice.
TheSultan
12-12-2013, 12:03 PM
I have no issue with stipends as long as they are reasonable, but I find it funny that the people saying they need to pay stipends are from the large schools that lose money on an annual basis. So, what they are saying is, "we need to be able to lose more money to be competitive"?
Also, their argument is weak, very weak. If they want to say that these kids need to be able to afford to do their laundry, get some things for their dorm room, some clothes - fine. But to say they need to do this to stay competitive? Why are you not competitive now? Aren't you all on the same level playing field? The only reason they want to do this is to keep the Fresno States, the Boise States, the BYUs, the Northern Illinois' and the Nevadas at bay, instead of allowing them into their coveted BCS bowls.
And since when those schools earn BCS bowls berths, attendance and television numbers suffer, I can completely see why they don't want them there.
TheSultan
12-12-2013, 01:49 PM
Goose...good questions....my thoughts in red.
This will be interesting. So let's say the Big 5 want to provide players with a stipend of $500 per month.
Will there be anything preventing schools from the Mountain West / CUSA / American / Big East / Missouri Valley / Horizon / Sun Belt / MAC / etc, from doing the same? If the other five FBS conferences all agree to pay too, will they be able to do so?
I can't how they could disallow it, unless the Big 5 simply left to do their own thing.
Is this just for schollarship athletes, or is it for all athletes? Football may have 85 on schollie, but most big schools have about 110 when adding in walk-ons. Baseball may only allow 12 schollies, but they likey have more than 25 on a team. Same with soccer.
It would likely simply be attached to the value of the scholarship, so it would only cover scholarship athletes.
No big deal for most Big East schools most likely, as even $500 per month isn't a killer when you don't have the 100+ football players and offsetting women's schollies.
If the Big 5 leave the NCAA, do those athletic departments lose their non for profit status? Are state school athletes now employees of the state (I sure it would be worded to avoid this one).
The NCAA has nothing to do with their non-profit status. That status is granted because they are part of a non-profit university. When people advocate athletic departments losing their non profit status, what they are technically saying is that the income derived from athletics should be considered taxable as "unrelated business income." Or income outside of their stated purpose as an educational institution.
What happens if in the next 5 years there is a shift in how people view games and subsequently pay for cable tv? Could TV revenues to conferences decline? Then what happens?
Who knows. My guess is that the shift you are talking about is much longer than five years away to make a dent in the revenues.
Goose85
12-12-2013, 02:08 PM
And since when those schools earn BCS bowls berths, attendance and television numbers suffer, I can completely see why they don't want them there.
You mean the bowl or the network don't want them there? I think the bowls are happy to have them there, and probably the networks too. It is the greed of the big five conferences that don't want them there.
Bowl attendance for the Orange Bowl last year, with Northern Ill, had a very good attendance year of 72,000, better than the prior 3 years.
The Feista Bowl attendance in 2007 when Boise State played Oklahoma was 73,700. The closest Feista bowl attendance since was in 2010 when two non BCS schools, Boise State and TCU played in front of 73,200.
In the past five bowl games, the Sugar Bowl hasn't matched the 2008 attendance level of 74,383, which was the year Hawaii played. The Sugar bowl attributes a dismal 2013 showing of 54,100 to Florida who only sold 7,000 tix.
I think the bigger issue becomes when a school's fans get tired of going to the same bowl, not when the non bcs guy gets their shot.
http://www.bcsfootball.org/news/story?id=4809856
TheSultan
12-12-2013, 02:53 PM
You mean the bowl or the network don't want them there? I think the bowls are happy to have them there, and probably the networks too. It is the greed of the big five conferences that don't want them there.
Bowl attendance for the Orange Bowl last year, with Northern Ill, had a very good attendance year of 72,000, better than the prior 3 years.
The Feista Bowl attendance in 2007 when Boise State played Oklahoma was 73,700. The closest Feista bowl attendance since was in 2010 when two non BCS schools, Boise State and TCU played in front of 73,200.
In the past five bowl games, the Sugar Bowl hasn't matched the 2008 attendance level of 74,383, which was the year Hawaii played. The Sugar bowl attributes a dismal 2013 showing of 54,100 to Florida who only sold 7,000 tix.
I think the bigger issue becomes when a school's fans get tired of going to the same bowl, not when the non bcs guy gets their shot.
http://www.bcsfootball.org/news/story?id=4809856
Attendance statistics are largely meaningless due to the mandatory ticket purchases that the schools have to make. Northern Illlinois took a bath on the Orange Bowl because of this.
But the real number is the television ratings and those are generally dismal. Here they are from last year...the Orange Bowl, despite being played on New Years Day, was the lowest of the BCS bowls. And was also beaten by a couple other non-BCS bowls.
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2013/01/2012-13-college-football-bowl-tv-ratings-bcs-sec-top-the-charts/
Let me put it another way, if the Orange Bowl had its druthers last year and could have picked any school it wanted to play Florida State, do you think they pick Northern Illinois? Or any other non-BCS school? Not a chance. They would probably have taken Georgia...but they couldn't because UNI had to go somewhere and Florida was the second SEC school chosen. The only reason schools like UNI have access to these bowls is due to the threat of legislation and lawsuit.
The Big 5 programs almost always draw the biggest television ratings, and since that is what drives the bowl pay out amounts, I think the Big 5 programs deserve everything they can get from the BCS bowls.
Goose85
12-12-2013, 03:57 PM
The ticket issue is not unique. Most schools take a bath on tickets, including the big boys like Wisconsin. Wisconsin loses money on bowl game tickets every year. Big 10 championship too, as when they played Nebraska there were more than 20,000 empty seats. No reason to buy through the school when you can get them cheaper at the stadium. Even schools like Florida and Florida State who often play closer to home take a bath on tickets.
What I dislike about the bowl system is it doesn't matter who is good or who the better teams are, it matters what conference you belong to. I will say, I think this year the BCS bowls should be pretty good, and I think from what I've seen, UCF belongs.
TheSultan
12-12-2013, 04:28 PM
The problem is that if you look at the entire concept of bowl games, it looks ridiculous. They are essentially meaningless games, most of which are played in less than packed stadiums. They only really work because they draw better television numbers than normal programming at a time when a lot of people aren't working.
The big bowls always were about the big schools drawing big crowds and big television ratings. They were never meant to determine a champion. So college football fans are stuck with a bizarre system of meaningless exhibitions and now a four team playoff to try to determine a champion. It is inevitable that it will grow larger however, and the importance of the bowls as stand alone games will slowly fade away.
Nukem2
12-12-2013, 04:35 PM
The problem is that if you look at the entire concept of bowl games, it looks ridiculous. They are essentially meaningless games, most of which are played in less than packed stadiums. They only really work because they draw better television numbers than normal programming at a time when a lot of people aren't working.
The big bowls always were about the big schools drawing big crowds and big television ratings. They were never meant to determine a champion. So college football fans are stuck with a bizarre system of meaningless exhibitions and now a four team playoff to try to determine a champion. It is inevitable that it will grow larger however, and the importance of the bowls as stand alone games will slowly fade away.
I would agree that the playoff system will expand. And, that will certainly dilute the remaining bowl. Though, they will still be atound to give alums an opportunity for a FB vacation....dull.
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