markets havent always mattered to conferences like they do now...sure, confernce networks help alot...but even the fact that grandma has to pay for a sports bundle that includes nbc sprts network in her package just so she can watch movies on the hallmark channel ultimately finds its way back to our athletic departments in dollars. its all a bubble....bc grandma is forced to pay for the sports channels...
Hold up. First, who is bundling Hallmark with Fox Sports Ohio (et al) in a sports bundle? I don't think that's happening, but I can only speak for what I know here in Southeast Texas... I have Dish, and the local cable is Time Warner... in either case, the sports bundle is, in fact, a sports bundle.
But second and more importantly, if this cable/satellite subscription money is so significant, how do you square that assertion with the fact that the Big East's (essentially now CUSA schools plus a few BE holdovers) proposed NBC contract is approximately equivalent to CUSA's contract?
You can't because it's not (significant). In fact, interestingly, here in Texas, everyone thought the Longhorn Network was going to be a veritable money tree for UT, partially for the reason you've suggested... that there would be a stream of basic cable/satellite income, plus the advertising dollars, with ESPN (which manages the network) getting their cut. Turns out that it's been muchadoaboutnothing, at least so far.
so, yes tv markets matter more now for big east and cusa more than before and new tv contracts are yielding more for midmajor conferences than they did...
I think I just offered verifiable information to the contrary... I'll wait to see if you can find any other possible support for your assertion, but until then, this is just more empty optimism.
there are plwnty of schools that havent maxed their potential....most bcs schools have...smu in the state of texas is maxed out....but odu easily is a school that could compete in the top of the nbe....they were a great grab. so tv market revenue hasnt always been the same and schools dont always stay the same those that are newer to the sport in nice metros without nearby market competition can move right on up ....ive read articles that say nfl is most watched and recwntly ncaa football is 2nd.
I've acknowledged that there are opportunities for individual schools to ascend to higher levels of competition.
It's ancillary to the core of this discussion, but worth noting that while NCAA football is popular, it hasn't grown appreciably in popularity so much as baseball has begun to decrease in popularity. (And that's not just me talking... I've provided an independent source that says as much.)
do a little research on the history of the big east...great study on how markets change
People have their various interests and sub-interests. For me, sports has been a constant interest over my lifetime, but moreover, this conference membership thing is not some area that I've happened to engage recently, but rather something I've been focused upon for as long as I can remember. Additionally, I have close relatives who have been employed in media... there were Broadcasting magazines in my house that I read regularly when I was in junior high and high school... so again, none of this is new territory of interest for me. I certainly bow to whatever wisdom that dshoe would bring to a discussion here, or Dave Weekley would... I don't have that level of insight... but for someone who hasn't been specifically employed in that industry, and as someone who has regularly had friendships with guys like that, I feel about as well-informed about this area as anyone could be who isn't getting a paycheck from the industry.
Point being, I'm not sure what you want me to glean from researching the Big East, but I can tell you that I've been paying fairly-close attention from the time of the Eastern Eight and the days when the Lambert Trophy was a big deal. Not only have I lived through it, I've made it a point to read extensively and to understand what was happening.
Maybe you're failing to understand that I do NOT disagree that markets change and schools change....
"....But this is not about what's possible, it's about what's likely.
And history, not rose-colored glasses, says it is (a) likely that, if surrounded by Sun Belt and FBS-newbie conference peers, our next TV contract is going to be similar to what Sun Belt schools have always fetched, and (b) likely that other conferences' schools are going to be in a decidedly better position to claim the BCS slot, which thusly puts them in a decidedly better position to reap that substantial reward... and assuming that we allow them to get what they want, gives those schools in MWC and Big East the financial influx to put some additional distance between them and us.
This is about whether we should be content at this stage or whether we should be investing all of our available energies into putting pressure on our administration to do what needs to be done to keep us in a relationship with our current peers.
Why wouldn't they do that naturally?... why wouldn't Kopp, in particular, be working toward that end?
I don't doubt for a second that he's good-intentioned. But he's a short-timer like practically any president at this level, and if left without impetus to do otherwise, he can be much easier satiated by the short-term money that will come from the exit fees... the long-term isn't as important to him as it is to us. Moreover, he only has so much political capital to spend. He only has so much time to invest. Without palpable pressure from his base, he's not likely to step up."