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daveinop

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


Per the article, $250 is the max. Interesting part is ESPN did not


make a competitive bid.

So they are not worried about content, they are not artificially driving up market value, and they are contractually bound to adjust what they have with the ACC.

Does this mean they will also lowball the ACC or is it a case of knowing the ACC is where their disposable cash is headed right now?

(In response to this post by HOO86)

Posted: 04/19/2016 at 7:20PM



+1

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Current Thread:
 
  
Fox & B1G closing in on Tier 1 Media Rights Deal. -- HOO86 04/19/2016 4:38PM
  $250 million per year for half? -- crabcake77 04/19/2016 11:00PM
  Delete post** -- crabcake77 04/19/2016 10:59PM
  You have it wrong -- nebraskafaninwi 04/19/2016 5:41PM
  "1/3 of the US?" By what metric? ** -- crabcake77 04/19/2016 10:45PM
  Losing major metro areas is a big deal -- nebraskafaninwi 04/19/2016 7:34PM
  Frankly ESPN got ny city and dc as well -- Mercury 04/19/2016 8:59PM
  You don't know what you are talking about -- nebraskafaninwi 04/19/2016 7:56PM
  ESPN loses no markets. They are in them all. -- HOO86 04/19/2016 8:17PM
  Re: ESPN loses no markets. They are in them all. -- 33laszlo99 04/20/2016 12:47AM
  They would lose CFB markets...major deal -- nebraskafaninwi 04/19/2016 8:27PM
  This statement isn't even close to correct -- daveinop 04/20/2016 08:42AM
  They'll survive without Ohio and Michigan. -- HOO86 04/19/2016 8:40PM
  Exactly. What markets are they losing? -- crabcake77 04/19/2016 11:18PM
  Yep! Nailed it ** -- FlyFishingHokie 04/19/2016 8:04PM

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