- Thread starter
- #1
College football existed similarly before TV contracts, it will continue to exist without them. A 30 team league is just out of the question really. It's so far beyond a possibility that it's not worth discussing. What would be more likely, and what I've been promoting, is separating the Power Five from everyone else. That would make it about 60 teams. I don't think you're going to be able to shrink it much lower than that.
There is cash for college football it's still relatively cheap. Netflix would take CBS' SEC deal tomorrow and bump the price because of the subscription potential.When cable tv dies the gravy train is over for college football. Streaming will be the norm, but not at the high prices cable charge, meaning the payouts won't be as much.
There is cash for college football it's still relatively cheap. Netflix would take CBS' SEC deal tomorrow and bump the price because of the subscription potential.
Subscriptions is where the money will be.
The NFL is in trouble ain't no one paying a billion for Monday Night Football.
You really need to read the entire post because the point is money wise college football is still a great value for any media venue. The NFL is now probably over substantial value. That means the NFL will have to cut budget at some point where at least the P5 conferences should be able to find alternative revenue sources.Lol you think college football would be fine but the NFL is in trouble? I guess in Alabama college football is bigger, but in the rest of America the NFL is the sports king.
fifySounds like a stReaming pile of crap to me.
So why is the school going broke?LSU stadium holds over 102,000.
Tickets start at around $500 for all home games.
102,000x500=51,000,000
Then there is parking and tailgate area fees
I think we'll be ok.
So why is the school going broke?
John Bel Edwards says budget crisis threatens all of Louisiana -- even LSU football
You really need to read the entire post because the point is money wise college football is still a great value for any media venue. The NFL is now probably over substantial value. That means the NFL will have to cut budget at some point where at least the P5 conferences should be able to find alternative revenue sources.
It's not a popularity question but an economic one.
That article is crap.I read the article, it said the current college football model wouldn't be profitable and they'd have to shed all the small schools to make enough attractive games for someone to want to pay. Basically dump Iowa state and South Carolina and make the big schools all play each other.
That article is crap.
Cable will be gone and subscription services will be the future. However TV won't go away completely and people will watch college football and will pay to be able to do it.
The P5 conferences are still under valued and will be able to find alternative income sources. The NCAA basketball tournament is worth a billion by itself and is the main source of yearly income for the NCAA. All the schooos have the do is kick the NCAA to the curb and there is a ton of money to make up for cable. With steaming it will be less but still a substantial cut.
There is no doubt smaller schools will suffer and we will probably see the emergence of a super division in college football but there is opportunity with restructure.
The NFL is going to take the big hit and so will other pro sports as they have tapped as many markets as they can already. College football has not.
It's going to be subscription based and it will work with the current numbers that are being generated.I completely disagree with this, and the ratings of the NFL compared to college ball back me up. The college ball money train won't be as green without cable, as streaming services won't be as desperate for content since you're only paying for what you want. So basically without an ESPNU type of channels needing content, no matter how boring "Texas vs UTSA" the payouts for college ball won't be as big. Supply and demand, steaming will make college football a regional sport, with some of us choosing to sometimes stream the bigger games per conference, "Alabama vs Auburn".