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Conference Realignment Board

daveinop

Joined: 04/10/2003 Posts: 8165
Likes: 518


So, why would it be in ESPN's best interest for the ACC to collapse?


Let's assume for the moment that the disparity in network payouts to the SEC and ACC continues to grow to the point some believe it will and it becomes financial suicide for the ACC to continue to exist...meaning that enough ACC members will vote to disband or otherwise do what it takes to abandon ship.

Would ESPN then abandon its eastern footprint or try to maintain it as part of an expanded SEC or something else? Would it risk ceding all or part of it to the B1G? Would they claim to continue to hold the media rights of the signatories and repackage individual agreements?

And are we sure that SECN/B1G money is actually available to UVA, VT, NCSU, UNC, GT, FSU, Clemson, and Miami...that the disparity in payouts is simply the result of sharing with schools that have no football draw (that math probably isn't too complicated but I haven't done it)? If so, is a vote to disband more politically acceptable than a vote to revise the profit sharing structure...don't they land in the same place?

I don't think ESPN is going to give the ACC double the value of the state of North Carolina to offset the lack of interest in Wake and Duke football. But I'm also struggling to see how the loss of essentially exclusive coverage of college sports from Florida to Virginia, the loss of ACC basketball as a whole, and a chunk of ND sports, until 2036 works out for ESPN.

Posted: 08/08/2021 at 09:51AM



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  I don't see ESPN wanting to do that. -- HOO86 08/08/2021 3:13PM

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