DAWG61 said:
the only player ever to get thrown out on fielder's indifference.* One question for the FSU fan. Do you want FSU to stay in the ACC, move to the Big12 or be the 15th member of the SEC and why?
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font face="Calibri">My first choice would be the SEC; however, UF will never
allow that happen. Georgia, Alabama and Auburn would probably not allow that to
happen either as we recruit Georgia and Alabama heavily and the only recruiting
advantage they have over us is saying that they play in the SEC. Geographically,
the SEC is the right fit for FSU. We are actually closer to every SEC team than
UF is. That leaves the Big 12, which is not a bad option at all with teams like
Texas, Oklahoma, WVU, Oklahoma State, TCU etc. If Clemson comes, and maybe a GT
or VT, we would be in a division with them and WVU. Proximity would not be as
big of an issue as some like to make it. Right now, FSU will have to travel to
NY, Boston, the Carolinas etc. Someone did the travel totals for the ACC and
Big 12 and it’s only about 200 more miles total if we joined the Big 12. </font></p>
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font face="Calibri">It all comes down to dollars and cents. First, in the Big 12’s,
like the SEC’s, the average payout per team is much larger than that of the
ACC. Right now, it is being rumored that each Big 12 team will receive $20
million per year over the next 15 years from their tier 1 and 2 games. That’s
$3 million more than the ACC payout per school, or $45 million over the course
of the 15 year contract. Now, that’s not even considering the additional revenue
each school would get should FSU, and likely Clemson, join. I’ve heard anywhere
from $23-$25 million per school should us and another school join. Now that
number jumps to between $90 and $120 million extra dollars FSU would receive
from the Big 12 TV contract over the ACC’s. Another HUGE advantage of the Big
12 and SEC is that each team owns their tier 3 game rights. In the ACC, the $17
million per year includes 1,2 and 3 tier games. The Big 12 and SEC’s tv
contract only includes tier 1 and 2. For example, UF has signed a 10 year, $82
million dollar deal with Sun Sports to broadcast their tier three games. That’s
an extra $8.2 million per year on top of the conferences average per team
payout. You can see, that $90-$120 million dollar figure would grow substantially
with the ability to independently sell our tier 3 rights. Add $8.2 million to the
$90, you get $237 million dollars over the course of the 15 year contract; that’s
crazy money. And we would be crazy to give anyone, not just UF, that much of a
financial advantage over us. </font></p>
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font face="Calibri">Why does money matter? Recruiting. It helps with facilities,
recruiting budget and the ability to retain assistant and head coaches and not
lose them to other programs that can pay more. </font></p>
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font face="Calibri">Another unknown is how will the new playoff be structured?
With the Pac 12 and Big 10 and SEC and Big 12 pitting conference champions
against one another (should their champions not make the playoff), where does
that leave the ACC champion? On the outside looking in, if you ask me. Talk
about a killer for recruiting. Now, I don’t know that, that would happen, but
it is certainly a possibility. Another advantage of the four conferences above;
each conferences will control the rights to those conference championship
games. The payout could be, and most likely will be, huge. </font></p>
</p>
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 10pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font face="Calibri">So, in a nutshell, I’d prefer to play in the SEC because we geographically
fit, but UF will never allow that to happen. The next best choice is the Big
12. It’s really a no brainer unless the ACC can somehow lure ND to join and
another big time football program to help drive up the TV contract payout. </font></p>
</p>