A little more...there are some good articles
about what the SEC schools had to do to prep for and meet the standards for the SECN. Each SEC member has to be able to produce feeds that meet various technical and other production standards, and they have to produce certain numbers of broadcasts. The productions are designed to be able to be delivered in both digital and linear formats.
What goes linear is a subset of what the network as a whole produces and it is designed to appear not only on SECN, but any ESPN production.
If the ACC does not get a designated channel, and it doesn't sound like it will, but it does what the SEC schools have had to do under the SECN umbrella, then do we care more about how the product is delivered, or more about how many events are made available to viewers and how much we get paid?
|
(
In response to this post by Atlee Hokie)
Posted: 03/12/2016 at 11:11AM