We are on Facebook because the costs are low. The SEC will always be on the big boy streaming channels because they are the market and that is where the money is. Streaming does open up opportunity for every small college and university for their fans to watch games. None of that exposure will matter to their national prominence, which I think this topic gets mixed up with.
There is almost nothing not being commercially and easily accessed vis streaming already. The medium over which the signal goes is not the issue of what is or is not the future of sports. We are already fully in the streaming age. I stream ESPN and Stadium, CBSSports and FOX Sports, any game on NBC, CBS, or ABS I stream. I know not everyone has sufficient bandwidth, but that is the natural evolution of things and will eventually be resolved. The stream vs coax is not the issue. It seems the point is now, and will always be, where the money can be made. Who is most sellable. I submit that no matter what the medium (e.g., 5g, cable, wifi stream, etc.), the P5 will own whatever it is. You can stream with a high quality production, crew, and on air talent or stream the same thing with a low budget and not so great crew.
The same people that own the current airwaves and streams will be the same, no matter how data is streamed in the future. It is about market and the consumer not about how the signal reaches your screen. Facebook streaming and Stadium have enabled fans of small market teams to watch their games. Thats great. But we can't confuse making games more accessible to its small fan base as akin to leveling the playing field. The money will still go to the streams that deliver the product people want most, which I don't think will be changing any times soon, no matter if 100% of every school program was available on demand on any device, the signal stream people will be watching are the same as they are watching now.
The more things change the more they stay the same.