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Congratulations to Stanford, Cal, Oregon State, and Washington State for making it to the 2024-2025 conference tournament semi-finals.
The Pac 12 fizzle is a case study for the GW School of Business Sports Management program. The conference’s leadership failed to negotiate along with competing media interests. Take for example, UC Berkeley’s (known as Cal) Chancellor Carol Christ. GW has had its scandals in the past but nothing compares to the fiscal dread that Cal alumni and student athletes will face for a generation. The importance of striking a lucrative media deal was an absolute necessity for the sports program’s survival.
It goes back a long way. In 2012, Cal’s Memorial Stadium finished a $321 million renovation that transformed an old football stadium that resembled the Roman Coliseum to a facility that was up to code. By adding a new student athlete performance center the school took on debt of $455 million. Alumni pledges and advanced season ticket sales never materialized. Interest alone consumes 20% of the athletic department’s annual budget. One Berkeley business professor calculated that it will take 100 years to pay off the debt. The venue had a nice ten year naming rights deal. It was called FTX Field..briefly until the Sam Bankman-Fried takedown. The stadium is mostly accessible to students on campus, but no one else. Other than home games and a few concerts the building is empty.
Compare it to San Diego State University’s Snapdragon Stadium. Home to the Mountain West SDSU Aztecs. The construction cost was slightly below Memorial Stadium from ten years before. It opened on time and through a partnership with Qualcomm is fully digital. It’s built for college football but has amenities that you would expect from an NFL stadium. The school is enhancing revenue by bringing in professional sports and local area restaurants. A new major league soccer franchise expansion team will start play in 2025. It’s already home to the women’s national soccer league San Diego Waves FC. Recently, it hosted the 2023 World Lacrosse Championship.
Cal’s Chancellor Christ did not focus on the need for stable revenue from a traditional broadcasting partner. After long delays the Apple streaming proposal was appealing because of the promise of a new and different user experience. One that let subscribers tailor and manipulate how they wanted to watch games. It promised to deliver a format that could bring up stats on demand and other features that no one has yet to experience. The problem was that each Pac 12 conference school’s revenue was based on an algorithm dependent on clicks, sale of personal information (marketing), and other third party licenses. Hey, let’s see how this works out and if it’s a bad deal then there is an escape clause in two years. A batch of schools had enough and sought “stability” with another conference’s media deal. One that made sense.
Now the remaining four are left to take any deal they can get. Cal’s Christ has always fit the elitist attitude. Several years ago, when then Senator Harris cancelled as the University commencement speaker five days before graduation Chancellor Christ stepped in as a fast substitute. Harris refused to speak in support of the school’s janitor union which was planning to strike. Tough for Christ to come up with a polished speech on short notice. Instead of assigning a speech writer to bring hope and encouragement to the graduates she screamed about Trump for thirty minutes.
The result of poor leadership is that Cal will have to cut some of the 28 athletic programs to stay afloat. Cal’s athletic programs had produced more Olympians than any other school, in any country.
Recruiting will absolutely suffer. Do you think that DeMatha’s Malcolm Thomas will still show any interest in being a Bear in 2024? Cross Cal off.
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Not only did Cal go deeper in to debt than most bankrupt developing countries seeking handouts from the IMF in order to retrofit and upgrade their stadium, but Cal also owes $25 million to the coach that was supposed make the spending worthwhile by taking them to their first Rose Bowl since Ike was President (spoiler alert: he didn´t deliver the goods). And, Cal poisoned its relationships with employee unions and the rest of Berkeley at-large in the process. And, Cal´s business school is accross the street from the stadium, so it is not as if there was no braintrust within a stone´s throw to warn them against it all.
This is a great precautionary tale for folks who want GW (or any school not named Ohio St or U$C) to spend lavishly on sports just to gain some trophies. Oregon did not spend money it did not have to become the national power it is (they let Nike do that for them). It will be interesting to see if all the moullah Colorado is throwing around ever brings a return. All these schools moving up to DI in hoops (including recent opponent UCSD and this season´s opening night rival Stonehill) could soon find themselves in Cal´s predicament, albeit with less eye-poping amounts of junk bonds floating around.
(one quibble, the San Diego comparison is a bit misleading; Cal did not have the land of a former NFL/Major League stadium to build on and instead was hogtied to its on-campus facility sitting on top of California´s most active earthquake fault and severely limited use dates set by law).
With the ACC now apparently looking vulnerable, it seems we have not heard the last of this cash grab, nor seen the last school go neck-deep in to debt just win a few games. Hartford may be the outlier, but they might not have been so off-kilter, either.
Last edited by GW Alum Abroad (8/07/2023 7:50 pm)
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Great insight…thank you!
Is there anyone with a pulse in the front office of the NCAA? Haven’t heard a squeak.
I realize that college football has been run by ESPN for decades, and now there’s a bidding battle by Fox, NBC, Apple, Prime, etc. going on.
Sad to watch this unfold while the NCAA sits on their hands and thousands of “student athletes” are manipulated. Tough times!
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GW Alum Abroad wrote:
All these schools moving up to DI in hoops (including recent opponent UCSD and this season´s opening night rival Stonehill) could soon find themselves in Cal´s predicament, albeit with less eye-poping amounts of junk bonds floating around.
(one quibble, the San Diego comparison is a bit misleading; Cal did not have the land of a former NFL/Major League stadium to build on and instead was hogtied to its on-campus facility sitting on top of California´s most active earthquake fault and severely limited use dates set by law).
One other addendum here: You're thinking of SDSU for that former NFL stadium, not UCSD. The latter, instead, has a ridiculous location right next to the beach and Torrey Pines in La Jolla, nowhere near an active fault line. Which, not a bad consolation prize.
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Foolish me, I used to think conferences were regionally constructed.
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The "Atlantic 10" is more than 10 and includes such "Atlantic" locales as Chicago, Dayton, and St Louis. The "Mountain West" is in those "mountain" cities of San Jose and San Diego. The "West Coast Conference" is best know for its member in Spokane (but also had that coastal school BYU for a while, too).
Cal and $tanford are taking about a $20 million hit to TV revenue and who knows how much of an increase in travel costs just to keep their crummy football programs afloat (although the move should boost basketball and baseball ticket sales, so maybe that is their upside?), and when Clemson and Florida St bolt it will only become a bigger financial hole.
GW´s decision to drop football in 1966 looks better and better every day (although it still does not absolve Marvin for his refusal to desegregate). Heck, with the money from t-shirt sales alone every year, GW´s football team is probably one of the more profitable in the country!
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This is a fascinating concept. The article is worth reading. Not sure if this is crazy, brilliant, or both.
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Two moves announced today:
Missouri State to C-USA - appears to be football-related which doesn't seem smart but I guess it's now or never like UMass. They hired Cuonzo Martin as a basketball coach this offseason.
Grand Canyon & Seattle to WCC - Seattle makes a lot of sense but was reportedly blocked by Gonzaga for a long time. Wonder if that signals the Zags potentially leaving for a bigger conference? GCU certainly bought their way in but the results lately don't lie. Both programs are departing from the WAC, a conference which may not exist in the near future much like the Pac-12 if schools continue to be poached by other conferences.
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Brett McMurphy @Brett_McMurphy 7h
Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State & San Diego State leaving Mountain West to join Pac-12 in 2026, sources told @ActionNetworkHQ. Official announcement is expected Thursday morning, sources said. The MWC schools will join Oregon State & Washington State, but Pac-12 still needs 2 more schools to reach 8-school minimum to qualify as an FBS conference.
MWC will receive a total of $111 million in exit fees. The departing Mountain West schools must each pay a minimum of a $17 million exit fee, which the Pac-12 is expected to help offset, a source said. Also, the Pac-12 must pay the MWC a total of $43 million for poaching the 4 Mountain West schools as part of a scheduling agreement b/w the 2 conferences
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If they finish this off by adding UNLV and Nevada, that isn't a bad little conference for football or basketball. If they could then poach Gonzaga and St. Mary's as non-football members, that could be a pretty solid Pac 10.
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Brett McMurphy @Brett_McMurphy 38m
Gonzaga leaving West Coast Conference to join Pac-12, source told @ActionNetworkHQ. Pac-12 still needs minimum of two football members by 2026, but Gonzaga, even w/out a football team, will receive a full conference revenue share in Pac-12, source said
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A few Pac12 rumours being floated (maybe just trial balloons from interested parties or bored speculation being pulled from rears or maybe legit):
Sacto St and Davis upgrade their football teams and join (maybe even sharing a stadium at CalExpo).
Nevada-Reno and Utah St get poached.
If the conference hits 10 teams and the ACC loses the lawsuit with Fla St and Clemson, Cal and $tanford rejoin.
San Jose St and an upgraded Portland St join (two traditional Pac12 markets if not traditional Pac12 teams).
Whatever the outcome in the west, the Big Boys are circling their waggons and there is either going to be less of pie to share or they are just going to take their pie at eat it themselves. The next key moment is what happens with Florida St/Clemson, if they can ditch the ACC it will really be a Big10/SEC duopoly with everyone else begging for crumbs.
Last edited by GW Alum Abroad (9/27/2024 2:27 pm)
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GW Alum Abroad wrote:
A few Pac12 rumours being floated (maybe just trial balloons from interested parties or bored speculation being pulled from rears or maybe legit):
Sacto St and Davis upgrade their football teams and join (maybe even sharing a stadium at CalExpo).
Nevada-Reno and Utah St get poached.
If the conference hits 10 teams and the ACC loses the lawsuit with Fla St and Clemson, Cal and $tanford rejoin.
San Jose St and an upgraded Portland St join (two traditional Pac12 markets if not traditional Pac12 teams).
Whatever the outcome in the west, the Big Boys are circling their waggons and there is either going to be less of pie to share or they are just going to take their pie at eat it themselves. The next key moment is what happens with Florida St/Clemson, if they can ditch the ACC it will really be a Big10/SEC duopoly with everyone else begging for crumbs.
Cal and Stanford would never rejoin
1) ACC Grant of Rights currently goes to 2036
2) Media payout would have to meet or exceed current ACC payout minus ACC Travel Costs plus New Pac travel costs
3) Most off the markets - tv and otherwise - for the new Pac Conference are worthless to Cal and Stanford
Stanford Graduate School Class of 86, 88
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From what I have been hearing (from the sports media, I am no insider), it won't be long before the football powerhouses leave the NCAA altogether. At that point, all the schools will probably realign into geographic conferences again, as this realignment will not affect the power football programs. It just makes no sense for lacrosse and volleyball teams to be flying across the nation for their games... What will be interesting is what happens to basketball. While basketball also makes a lot of money, it's not anywhere close to what football makes and most of the money is from the NCAA Tournament, not the regular season. And one of the principal draws of the NCAA Tournament are the David vs. Goliath matchups. So what seems to be coming for NCAA football might not be right for NCAA basketball. We shall see...
Last edited by DC Native (9/27/2024 4:46 pm)
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I imagine that the bean counters in these conference offices are trying to figure out whether their P4 basketball tournament can command the type of money CBS/Turner have been paying for the MBB Tournament. I think the $1.1B annually paid to the NCAA for the Tournament subsidizes pretty much everything that isn't football, including conference offices and a lot of athletics departments.
If the P4 can replace that cash cow with, say, their own TV rights deal for their own 64-67 team tournament that pays as much or more per school, then I think they'll be gone as soon as the NCAA agreement with CBS/Turner is done in 2032 (or earlier if they can find a legal way to bail).
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Well, duh. Once they finish monopolizing the football money to make sure the Akrons and North Texas and Utah States of the world don´t get a slice of the pie, they are then going to make sure the MEAC and NEC and Big Wests get screwed out of their share of the CBS/Turner money. Capitalism. I´d say fans of the schools hurt by this should just boycott any and all companies (sponsors included) involved, but since students, alums and fans of the "smaller" schools make up a minority of the eyeballs (and gambling accounts) paying attention, that ain´t gonna work. College sports were nice while they lasted, but much like rotary telephones and the use of spitoons, it is part of a bygone era.
Last edited by GW Alum Abroad (9/30/2024 2:59 pm)
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Mark Few, and his 711 wins and the all time winning % for Coaches in NCAA D1 History , the best Coach in the country for the last quarter of a century in a row is taking his Gonzaga powerhouse to the Pac12, official today, 2026 they will join The Pac12. Mark Few owns 3 all time records and dozens of School and WCC records:
Highest winning percentage, NCAA D1 History (minimum 600 games) : .834
Most consecutive NCAA tournament appearances since starting as head coach : 24Only Coach to win 8 or more consecutive conference championships twice
Gonzaga Records :
Most seasons named WCC coach of the year: 13
Most wins in school history: 711
Most undefeated regular seasons: 1 (26–0)
Most wins in a season: 37
Best Season 31–1
Most consecutive wins to start a season: 31 (Few also holds the No. 2 spot at 29)
Most consecutive wins: 31
Longest home court winning streak: 75
Most NCAA tournament appearances: 24
Most NCAA tournament wins: 46
Most NCAA championship game appearances: 2
A full current consecutive decade in a row to the Sweet 16 every year from the tiny WCC, at last time for Gonzaga long speculation. Mark Few and Gonzaga have 46 NCAA Tourney wins, 43 for Mark Few as HC and 3 more as the Associate Coach in 1998. GW is stuck on..... 3.
They play in a tiny gym in Spokane the potential for big things at GW is still here in the heart of the DMV. In Spokae WA he's 45-5 in the WCC Tourney with 43 NCAA Tourney wins:
Head coaching record
Overall 716–143 (.834)
Tournaments 43–24 (NCAA Division I Tournament wins)
45–5 (WCC tournaments)
Last edited by The Dude (10/01/2024 10:34 am)
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Don't sell us short, Dude. We have 4 NCAA Tournament wins...
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Mark Few and every poster on this site have one big thing in common - zero national championships. But none of us here run around calling each other "America's Greatest Coach." LOL.