Independent has worked well for Norte Dame and BYU, hasn't it?
Two reasons I can think of. They hate Texas and want you to screw yourselves or they love Texas and don't understand the likely outcome. Maybe there is a 3rd, but I can not imagine what it is.Texas isn't going independent, and why someone would want that makes zero sense to me.
Eh I've said from day 1. If Texas wants the deal done it will get done.Can't go to the Big 10 before 2031 unless they buy out ESPN'S contact for our teir three rights
Eh I've said from day 1. If Texas wants the deal done it will get done.
Yeah but ESPN is looking to cut costs anyway it can right now. If Texas come to them and said we'd like out of the LHN. I'm pretty sure they'd throw a partyLanguage in the contract is pretty binding. If Texas leaves the Big 12, the school must keep the terms of the present agreement, provide ESPN an exclusive 60-day window to negotiate for the other rights and allow ESPN a 48-hour window to match any offer. A prohibition on licensing content to third parties, prevents Texas from participation in the Big 10 network. Unless ESPN allows the Big 10 to buy out the LHN contract our only landing spot before 2031 is SEC or ACC.
Yeah but ESPN is looking to cut costs anyway it can right now. If Texas come to them and said we'd like out of the LHN. I'm pretty sure they'd throw a party
If the Horns had wanted expansion, there would have been expansion. They didn't, so there wasn't. The death certificate is all ready to go, even know the date now. Kansas will be ok, but the other 7 just voted to kill their programs today. Annual football TV dollars will drop from $30M to around $3M. They are so used to bending over when Texas walks in the room, they dropped their pants before knowing what this means for their future.
Brilliant.
Yes. I think expansion is imperative if we want to keep the conference alive. Otherwise who knows what conference we'd be moving in to.
I would personally prefer 5 or 6 power conferences each containing exactly 12 teams. The conferences would largely be grouped based on location. Not on TV sets and TV deals. You know, so the student athlete wins. And so the students and fans could travel less and see more games.
Well 5 years in and the network is just now showing a modest profit(2million) at that pace ESPN would be lucky to break even.Once ESPN recoups their initial investment its a 70/30 profit sharing model. The end of the contract is very ESPN friendly. They aren't going to let us walk without a substantial buy out.
Well 5 years in and the network is just now showing a modest profit(2million) at that pace ESPN would be lucky to break even.
Even if the network was making 10 million profit this year it's not going to be a huge success for ESPN. As you said the inability to broadcast HS games and the slowness at which it became available to people like me outside the area really killed it. I bet ESPN and UT could come to an agreement on an exit if it came to that.That 2 million profit is based on projections by an outside firm that estimated 7.5 million subscribers both of which are disputed by ESPN. ESPN has claimed 20 million subscribers. The network is cash flow positive. A major setback was the inability to broadcast high school games. They will most likely get rid of the studio and run all the production from Bristol in order to maximize profits.