BFieldHusky wrote:Question for people. There has been much debate on the way the FOX contract works for women basketball. I know FOX controls everything on the mens side. I thought I read somewhere that FOX has control of selected women games, but not all. Can anyone clarify?
Just wondering if UConn could sell the games FOX doesn't broadcast on the womens side to SNY like they have in the past? There is a market for it.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:BFieldHusky wrote:Question for people. There has been much debate on the way the FOX contract works for women basketball. I know FOX controls everything on the mens side. I thought I read somewhere that FOX has control of selected women games, but not all. Can anyone clarify?
Just wondering if UConn could sell the games FOX doesn't broadcast on the womens side to SNY like they have in the past? There is a market for it.
Other than the tournament, there have been very few women's games telecast. For Marquette last year, we had three games telecast on FS1 (Notre Dame, DePaul and Georgetown), as well as the Women's Tournament. Many of the games were on the Big East Digital Network. Looking at DePaul, they had a number of their games on FS2, but still nothing big on FS1.
My guess is that Fox will recognize the importance of UConn's Women's team, and attempt to utilize as much as they can, given their windows. For those that it cannot utilize, it will likely sell to SNY.
BFieldHusky wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The original deal was a 12-year, $500 million deal; on average, that provided $41.6 million per year to the ten members ($4.16 million per member per year). It allowed the deal to be upgraded to $550 million if we went to eleven members, and $600 million if we went up to 12 members. So, without extending the deal - and just following parameters set forth in original deal - that would increase the average payout per year to $45.83 million per year ($4.58 million per member per year). From that, if Fox wanted to "extend" the current deal, upping the annual payout to $6 million, they would "only" need to increase the average payouts by $16.5 million per year total (around $1.65 million per member); from that increase it payouts, Fox gets an additional 40 Big East conference games (an extra two for each team, as well as the full 20 from UConn), as well as the right to an additional BE Tournament game. Not counting the access to UConn's OOC home games it will also acquire, it comes out to about 40k per "extra" contest.
I still think a BE-Fox extension gets announced next July 1st.
Good write up GoldenWarrior 11. Thanks. This makes a lot of sense. Hope you don't mind but I am going to share this on the UConn board (giving you credit of course).
Would be pretty amazing to make 6 million in the Big East, while the American (WITH FOOTBALL) would make just shy of 7 million a year.
BFieldHusky wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The original deal was a 12-year, $500 million deal; on average, that provided $41.6 million per year to the ten members ($4.16 million per member per year). It allowed the deal to be upgraded to $550 million if we went to eleven members, and $600 million if we went up to 12 members. So, without extending the deal - and just following parameters set forth in original deal - that would increase the average payout per year to $45.83 million per year ($4.58 million per member per year). From that, if Fox wanted to "extend" the current deal, upping the annual payout to $6 million, they would "only" need to increase the average payouts by $16.5 million per year total (around $1.65 million per member); from that increase it payouts, Fox gets an additional 40 Big East conference games (an extra two for each team, as well as the full 20 from UConn), as well as the right to an additional BE Tournament game. Not counting the access to UConn's OOC home games it will also acquire, it comes out to about 40k per "extra" contest.
I still think a BE-Fox extension gets announced next July 1st.
Good write up GoldenWarrior 11. Thanks. This makes a lot of sense. Hope you don't mind but I am going to share this on the UConn board (giving you credit of course).
Would be pretty amazing to make 6 million in the Big East, while the American (WITH FOOTBALL) would make just shy of 7 million a year.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:BFieldHusky wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The original deal was a 12-year, $500 million deal; on average, that provided $41.6 million per year to the ten members ($4.16 million per member per year). It allowed the deal to be upgraded to $550 million if we went to eleven members, and $600 million if we went up to 12 members. So, without extending the deal - and just following parameters set forth in original deal - that would increase the average payout per year to $45.83 million per year ($4.58 million per member per year). From that, if Fox wanted to "extend" the current deal, upping the annual payout to $6 million, they would "only" need to increase the average payouts by $16.5 million per year total (around $1.65 million per member); from that increase it payouts, Fox gets an additional 40 Big East conference games (an extra two for each team, as well as the full 20 from UConn), as well as the right to an additional BE Tournament game. Not counting the access to UConn's OOC home games it will also acquire, it comes out to about 40k per "extra" contest.
I still think a BE-Fox extension gets announced next July 1st.
Good write up GoldenWarrior 11. Thanks. This makes a lot of sense. Hope you don't mind but I am going to share this on the UConn board (giving you credit of course).
Would be pretty amazing to make 6 million in the Big East, while the American (WITH FOOTBALL) would make just shy of 7 million a year.
I know it is a sore subject with AAC Football fans (and probably a few UConn Football fans), but in terms of ROI, UConn will 100% be making more for basketball alone than any AAC basketball program BECAUSE they do not also have the added expense of football eating away from it. Say the AAC TV deal is $7 million. It has been argued that 75% of all television revenue is for football content (and the other $25 is for men's basketball). So, with that breakdown, TV revenue for football is just over $5 million (and men's basketball is for $2 million). With the costs for football coaching salaries, the added costs of equal Title IX scholarships, football stadium renovations, practice facilities maintenance and all the other expenses that go on into the costs of football, if you aren't in the P5, you aren't in the big-boy league of college football, period.
Between the added ticket sales, increased revenues, increased fan interest and increase in travel, the move is an absolute win/win. The whole paying $17 million argument to the AAC to leave is pretty comical to me. The AAC withheld $11 million from those payments (including one year where it will already be a member in the Big East), with UConn paying $1 million annually for six years. Once again, it is a PR move to frame it like that (no doubt from the AAC, who was so quick to declare a $1 billion deal without reading the fine print). In the long-run, UConn will be saving and making more money.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:BFieldHusky wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:The original deal was a 12-year, $500 million deal; on average, that provided $41.6 million per year to the ten members ($4.16 million per member per year). It allowed the deal to be upgraded to $550 million if we went to eleven members, and $600 million if we went up to 12 members. So, without extending the deal - and just following parameters set forth in original deal - that would increase the average payout per year to $45.83 million per year ($4.58 million per member per year). From that, if Fox wanted to "extend" the current deal, upping the annual payout to $6 million, they would "only" need to increase the average payouts by $16.5 million per year total (around $1.65 million per member); from that increase it payouts, Fox gets an additional 40 Big East conference games (an extra two for each team, as well as the full 20 from UConn), as well as the right to an additional BE Tournament game. Not counting the access to UConn's OOC home games it will also acquire, it comes out to about 40k per "extra" contest.
I still think a BE-Fox extension gets announced next July 1st.
Good write up GoldenWarrior 11. Thanks. This makes a lot of sense. Hope you don't mind but I am going to share this on the UConn board (giving you credit of course).
Would be pretty amazing to make 6 million in the Big East, while the American (WITH FOOTBALL) would make just shy of 7 million a year.
Math was wrong (I thought it looked off) - it would come out to $400k per contest (not $40k).
BFieldHusky wrote:I keep going back to the piece Kevin McNamara wrote when news broke we were joining. Word is he is very connected inside the Big East office. He got this info from a good source. I am not saying the number is right on, but this wasn't just floated out of thin air. My guy has heard it as well.
Don’t listen when you hear Big East people say this isn’t about money. Expansion is always about money and after getting steamrolled for years by former football partners Boston College, Pittsburgh and Syracuse, everyone should know the score. UConn will pay an entry fee to the Big East ($3.5 million), but that’s usually deducted from future earnings. More importantly, TV partner Fox Sports certainly pushed for this. Word is the addition of UConn can trigger a clause in the Big East’s deal with Fox and re-open talks on a contract that has six years to run. This will mean a bump from the current $4 million or so per school TV payout; perhaps an additional $2 million per school.
BFieldHusky wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:BFieldHusky wrote:Question for people. There has been much debate on the way the FOX contract works for women basketball. I know FOX controls everything on the mens side. I thought I read somewhere that FOX has control of selected women games, but not all. Can anyone clarify?
Just wondering if UConn could sell the games FOX doesn't broadcast on the womens side to SNY like they have in the past? There is a market for it.
Other than the tournament, there have been very few women's games telecast. For Marquette last year, we had three games telecast on FS1 (Notre Dame, DePaul and Georgetown), as well as the Women's Tournament. Many of the games were on the Big East Digital Network. Looking at DePaul, they had a number of their games on FS2, but still nothing big on FS1.
My guess is that Fox will recognize the importance of UConn's Women's team, and attempt to utilize as much as they can, given their windows. For those that it cannot utilize, it will likely sell to SNY.
So FOX would be the one selling the women content to SNY, not UConn? It just threw me the way the language in the contract reads.
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