It totally will. Until summer 2015, when all the SEC teams will be bigger, faster, and stronger.Originally posted by cardinalrod:
I hope for; yes it will stop.
But I think they can't help themselves.
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Follow the money ... the SEC has the most football crazy fans of any conference, and ESPN is a corporate entity that is going to cater to its customers.Originally posted by cardinalrod:
I hope for; yes it will stop.
But I think they can't help themselves.
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Follow the apparel money in this instance. ESPN answers to the Apparel companies. And all entities, top to bottom are businesses first. No matter what their marketing machine says otherwise. Remember. Any news = commercials and agendas.Originally posted by PushupMan:
Follow the money ... the SEC has the most football crazy fans of any conference, and ESPN is a corporate entity that is going to cater to its customers.Originally posted by cardinalrod:
I hope for; yes it will stop.
But I think they can't help themselves.
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A third of those teams are in the MST. Combine PST and MST and you have a good portion of the population. It's really about apparel sales IMO and nothing more. Given PRO competition, education, disposable income and cultural acceptance, I suspect the SEC buys the most gear per capita.Originally posted by trinity45:
To me the only conference that has any thing to complain about is the PAC 12, they shined and outside of Oregan nobody really gets much pub because of playing later being in the West Coast time zone. The Big 10 had a good bowl season but did receive a fair share of Pub from the media, no other conference really shined to say they were unfairly treated by the Media except TCU proved a point.
The PAC 12 has their own network owned by FOX. ESPN on the other hand owns the SEC Network. Conflict of interest.Originally posted by trinity45:
To me the only conference that has any thing to complain about is the PAC 12, they shined and outside of Oregan nobody really gets much pub because of playing later being in the West Coast time zone. The Big 10 had a good bowl season but did receive a fair share of Pub from the media, no other conference really shined to say they were unfairly treated by the Media except TCU proved a point.
I must have been misreading all their pumping up the sec for the past several years then. This year they virtually had every team from the sec west in the top 5 at one point or another. No, they don't controlled the polls, but the do controll the propaganda to influence them.Originally posted by delphi99:
Colin Cowherd had some good points regarding bias. Basically he says ESPN is a media company that makes money on viewers and listeners. So why would they show bias to a league that has most of its teams in very small markets in the poorest part of the country. He said last night was good for them as it showed off the Big 10 and Pac 12, both located in much larger markets in parts of the country with much higher incomes. They can make more money in the Midwest and Far West than in the South.
Basically saying the SEC bias is a myth, at least as far as ESPN goes. Their bias will always be to increased revenue. Not sure if that is 100% true, but it makes sense
Sounds like Sears...Originally posted by CardX:
No, now they'll just work harder to promote their fading product.
Originally posted by cardinalrod:
I must have been misreading all their pumping up the sec for the past several years then. This year they virtually had every team from the sec west in the top 5 at one point or another. No, they don't controlled the polls, but the do controll the propaganda to influence them.
ESPN reports on the top teams. The SEC has a lot of the top ranked teams. Therefore, ESPN talks about those teams, promotes those games, etc. You think ESPN is going to make more money reporting on teams like Alabama or Mississippi St in the top 5, or teams like Pitt or Illinois going 6-6?
Poor people still own TVs and the SEC area by far loves college FB much more than the Midwest and west coast.Originally posted by delphi99:
Colin Cowherd had some good points regarding bias. Basically he says ESPN is a media company that makes money on viewers and listeners. So why would they show bias to a league that has most of its teams in very small markets in the poorest part of the country. He said last night was good for them as it showed off the Big 10 and Pac 12, both located in much larger markets in parts of the country with much higher incomes. They can make more money in the Midwest and Far West than in the South.
Basically saying the SEC bias is a myth, at least as far as ESPN goes. Their bias will always be to increased revenue. Not sure if that is 100% true, but it makes sense
SEC West went 2-5 in bowls and gave up 49, 42, 42, 34, 31 points in the lossesOriginally posted by topdecktiger:
Originally posted by cardinalrod:
I must have been misreading all their pumping up the sec for the past several years then. This year they virtually had every team from the sec west in the top 5 at one point or another. No, they don't controlled the polls, but the do controll the propaganda to influence them.
ESPN reports on the top teams. The SEC has a lot of the top ranked teams. Therefore, ESPN talks about those teams, promotes those games, etc. You think ESPN is going to make more money reporting on teams like Alabama or Mississippi St in the top 5, or teams like Pitt or Illinois going 6-6?
He's misleading imo. Which is interesting since he has his own radio show. Ratings don't mean a thing without a sponsor to write you a check. ESPN cares about sponsors and sponsors care about ratings. That's how it works.Originally posted by thecycle21:
I agree with Collin ESPN is all about the eyeballs.
Originally posted by cardsp:
SEC West went 2-5 in bowls and gave up 49, 42, 42, 34, 31 points in the losses
Nobody knew that was going to happen beforehand. You can't say that back in October, when half the SEC was top 10, ESPN should have known they would lose all those bowl games. At the time, all those teams were ranked in the top 10. Who do you think they are going to cover?