The Confidential

The ACC Sports Blog

Archive for the month “December, 2012”

Proposed ACC Divisions

With the recent addition of Louisville to replace Maryland, the word is that Louisville will just slot into Maryland’s position in the divisions.  What are those divisions?  Who knows?  The non-geographical distribution makes them impossible to remember.  In any event, the Confidential recommends the following divisions:

Atlantic (Coastal rival)

Boston College (NC State)

Wake Forest (Duke)

Syracuse (North Carolina)

Virginia Tech (Virginia)

Louisville (Clemson)

Pittsburgh (Georgia Tech)

Miami (Florida State)

In other words, this would be geographical, except that Wake Forest and Miami slide north and Virginia stays with the South.

The real loser here is Wake Forest, who loses games with its North Carolina-based rivals.  But this is just reality here–Wake Forest is in the worst negotiating position of all teams in the NCAA.  Even Iowa State has its own network now.  You can make arguments for every ACC school to be in some other conference.  But not Wake Forest.  So, with apologies to the Demon Deacons, they just need to suck it up.  Life isn’t fair.  Besides, they also get to be in a division with two private schools.

Virginia gets to be in the South, playing North Carolina and Virginia Tech every year.

Miami gets to play Syracuse and Boston College–Northern exposure every year for those schools.  Florida State gets to be with all Southern-based schools.  Rare trips up north.  Miami and Florida State will play every year.

Were UConn and Cincinnati to ever join… this could be tweaked as follows:

Atlantic (Coastal rival)

Boston College (Wake Forest)

Cincinnati (NC State)

Syracuse (Duke)

UConn (North Carolina)

Virginia Tech (Virginia)

Louisville (Clemson)

Pittsburgh (Georgia Tech)

Miami (Florida State)

Under this scenario, private schools are matched up again.  The basketball is slanted heavily towards the Atlantic.  But any division with Duke and North Carolina is always going to be tough.

In the Confidential’s view, doing whatever one it can to make the divisions logical and easy to remember behooves its short-term and long-term interests.  No matter how hard you try to make divisions competitively balanced, it will not work out perfectly.  So at least use logic and common sense.

What do you think?  Do you prefer the current set-up?  Different idea?

ACC Basketball Rankings: December 18, 2012

This is particularly complex with Pitt, Louisville, Notre Dame, and Syracuse not yet in the ACC, but it can still be done.  This is how the Confidential ranks the ACC basketball teams as of December 18, 2012:

1Duke (9-0)–The Blue Devils are sitting pretty at 9-0, with plenty of good victories.  An easy choice for #1.

2. Syracuse (10-0)–The Orange are 10-0, which is great.  Next up, Temple.  Congrats to Jim Boeheim on win #900 too.

3. Louisville (9-1)–So far, only #1 Duke has toppled Louisville.  With wins over Missouri and Memphis, Louisville has an argument to be #2.  But undefeated trumps one loss.

4.Notre Dame (10-1)The Irish have now beaten Purdue and Kentucky.  That’s good enough for #4 here.

5. Pittsburgh (9-1)--The Panthers are off to a good start, but lacking a real quality win yet.   Only loss is to a very very good Michigan team.

6. Maryland (7-1)–The Terps have been good, losing only to Kentucky.  Still waiting on an impressive win though.  Northwestern is it right now.

7. Miami (6-1)–Not sure why Miami only has 7 games, but they have won 6 of them.  A bad loss, but a nice win over Michigan State.

8.North Carolina State (8-2)–The wins over Stanford and UConn look good.  The two losses are reasonable. 

9. North Carolina (8-2)–At 8-2, the Tar Heels really lack a quality win.  Losses to Butler and Indiana are understandable though.

10. Virginia (8-2)–10 through 12 are a toss-up.  The Wahoos have terrible losses early, but now have wins over Tennessee and Wisconsin.

11. Virginia  Tech (8-2) Va Tech has ugly losses, but a great win–over Oklahoma State.  Gives them the slide edge over Georgia Tech.

12. Georgia Tech (7-2)–No shame in the two losses, but it’s hard to find even a decent win for the Yellow Jackets.  The worst of the two loss teams so far.

13. Clemson (6-3)–The Tigers have tough losses–Gonzaga, Illinois, and Arizona.  Clear edge over the rest.

14. Florida State (6-4)–At 6-4, the Seminoles are still the ACC’s disappointment so far.  Not sure what the deal is.

15. Wake Forest (5-5)–At least Wake is at .500.

16. Boston College (5-5)–At least BC is at .500.

Right/wrong?  Disagree?  If not, let us know.

Nice Article About ACC’s Financial Picture

The Confidential will be light for the next week or so.  Sorry in advance.  There will not be many posts.

Here is a link to check out though.  The ACC might not be able to compete with the Big 10, but it sure is looking good overall.  According to this article, anyway.   Give it a read and let us know what you think.

ACC Goes Bowling: Duke vs. Cincinnati in the Belk Bowl

The bowl season began yesterday with a few battles flying well below the radar.  Moving beyond that mixed metaphor, however, it is time to begin analyzing the various bowl matchups featuring present and future members of the ACC.  Today’s featured matchup is the Belk Bowl, which will feature Duke and Cincinnati.  The game will be played at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, December 27.

How they got here (courtesy of http://www.jhowell.net/cf/scores/Sked2012.htm) :

Duke (ACC)

9/1 Sat vs. Florida International W 46 26
9/8 Sat @ Stanford L 13 50
9/15 Sat vs. North Carolina Central W 54 17
9/22 Sat vs. Memphis W 38 14
9/29 Sat @ *Wake Forest W 34 27
10/6 Sat vs. *Virginia W 42 17
10/13 Sat @ *Virginia Tech L 20 41
10/20 Sat vs. *North Carolina W 33 30
10/27 Sat @ *Florida State L 7 48
11/3 Sat vs. *Clemson L 20 56
11/17 Sat @ *Georgia Tech L 24 42
11/24 Sat vs. *Miami (Florida) L 45 52
12/27 Thu vs. Cincinnati @ Charlotte, NC Belk Bowl

6-6

376 420

Cincinnati (Big East)

9/6 Thu vs. *Pittsburgh W 34 10
9/15 Sat vs. Delaware State W 23 7
9/29 Sat vs. Virginia Tech W 27 24 @ Landover, MD
10/6 Sat vs. Miami (Ohio) W 52 14
10/13 Sat vs. Fordham W 49 17
10/20 Sat @ Toledo L 23 29
10/26 Fri @ *Louisville L 31 34
11/3 Sat vs. *Syracuse W 35 24
11/10 Sat @ *Temple W 34 10
11/17 Sat vs. *Rutgers L 3 10
11/23 Fri vs. *South Florida W 27 10
12/1 Sat @ *Connecticut W 34 17
12/27 Thu vs. Duke @ Charlotte, NC Belk Bowl

9-3

372 206

Key Stats:

PASSING YARDS

Cincinnati:  231.0 pg, 63rd Overall
Duke: 277.6 pg, 32nd Overall

RUSHING YARDS

Cincinnati: 199.8 pg, 32nd Overall
Duke: 119.0 pg, 107th Overall

POINTS FOR

Cincinnati: 31.0 pg, 48th Overall
Duke: 31.3 pg, 45th Overall

POINTS AGAINST

Cincinnati: 17.2 pg, 12th Overall

Duke: 35.0, 104th Overall
Analysis:
While the Confidential always likes to be a “homer” if possible.  So perhaps the analysis here is slanted by that.
Duke has played a much tougher schedule, but they lost many of the games against good opponents.  Often, by a lot.  Duke beat one bowl team, North Carolina.  Cincinnati beat three, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, and Virginia Tech.
But one factor favoring Duke in this game is that Cincy has lost its coach, Butch Jones.  We have seen Cincinnati (and many other teams) come out flat when playing a bowl game under such circumstances.  On the other hand, West Virginia rode Bill Stewart to a Fiesta Bowl victory and the removal of his interim head coach tag.  So even that one negative aspect is more of a question mark than certainty.
Another factor favoring Duke is the proximity to the location.  Duke fans should be relishing this opportunity to see the Blue Devils in this game.  They will have home field advantage.  Too much emotion on Duke’s side for this one.
Prediction:  Duke 28, Cincinnati 27.

R.I.P. Big East

Well, the Confidential is all about the Atlantic Coast Conference.  That being said, there is no denying that the ACC has had a huge role in killing the Big East, taking Miami, Virginia Tech, Boston College, Syracuse, Pitt, Louisville, and Notre Dame in the past 10 years or so.  That’s a conference unto itself.  Thus, today’s news that the Big East will announce the exiting of more schools–the seven basketball-oriented, football-eschewing, Catholic schools–is met with some guilt.  That the Big East is dying is unfortunate.  Moving forward, however, the question is what happens next?

The general consensus is that the 7 Catholic schools will somehow, someway form a new conference.  It might be called the Big East.  It might be called something else.  Who knows?  The consensus also is that additional, similar schools will be invited.  If so, this is what the Confidential would like to see:

Catholic Basketball Conference–East: Providence, Seton Hall, St. John’s, Georgetown, Villanova, Fordham

Catholic Basketball Conference–West: DePaul, Marquette, Creighton, St. Louis, Dayton, Xavier

If they wanted to get crazy, they could great a western flank, with Gonzaga, Loyolla Marymount, Santa Clara, and Portland, among others.  Either way, this would be the Catholic Basketball Conference–why not?

What about football?  What about football.  Yikes.  These are dark times for UConn, Cincinnati, USF, and Temple.  Newcomers UCF, SMU, Houston, Memphis, East Carolina, Tulane, and Navy are not too thrilled either.  While some of those schools may eventually get promoted to a top 5 conference, they cannot worry about that right now.

Without making a prediction, this is what the Confidential would like to see is two larger conferences form, centered around geography.  They can use the C-USA and MWC labels, as necessary.  It is important for the talent to be consolidated into two conferences so that there are more, better games.  This is the only way those schools will ever show any separation.  Remember, Boise State played a rather unimpressive schedule en route to national prominence.  It is up to these schools to schedule strong OOC and follow the same pattern.  If a small school in Boise, Idaho, can do it, any school can.

 

 

Grant of Rights: A Panacea?

The official definition of a panacea is either a “remedy for all disease or ills” and/or “an answer or solution for all problems or difficulties.”  Some think that the Big XII is extremely more stable than the ACC because it has a grant of rights for the next 12 years between its institutions, whereas the ACC relies on exit fees to impose solidarity.  Given that Maryland is leaving, and everybody is lining up to pay exit fees to flee the Big East, exit fees are obviously mere speed bumps on the realignment highway.  Indeed, the conventional wisdom is that a grant of rights is THE way to establish unbreakable solidarity.  Or is it?

It is common knowledge that the SEC does not rely on exit fees or a grant of rights.  And yet nobody is leaving the SEC any time soon.  The Big 10 has a grant of rights, and only some silly talk regarding Penn State in a post-sanctions world has caused anyone to even consider it possible for a defection.  And that likely has little to do with the grant of rights and more to do with the great institutional fits/financial situation.  This issue only really matters with the Big XII.  The question is whether the grant of rights prevents realignment from touching the Big XII?  The answer must be “no.”

First and foremost, a grant of rights is a contract.  A contract can always be broken.  As long as the breaching party pays the non-breaching party the appropriate damages, there is nothing to prevent a breach of contract.  If you contract to paint someone’s house for $1,000, expecting to generate $300 in profit… the homeowner could breach the contract and pay you the $300 anyway.  If the homeowner found someone to do the work for $600, that would make sense for the homeowner.  Conversely, if you were offered $5,000 to paint someone else’s house, you could elect to break your obligation and pay the homeowner the difference in what it would cost to replace you.  If there was a replacement for $1,100, you would owe $100.  If the replacement was $900, you would owe nothing.  Again, you are allowed to breach a contract.

As it relates to a grant of rights, any school could breach the contract.  In doing so, they would owe their conference damages.  How those damages would be calculated cannot be that much more different than ascertaining the damages caused by any other defection.  If anything, it could be narrower because the obligation is limited to certain revenue streams.  While an exit fee addresses the uncertainty of calculating damages with a termination of a conference membership, the damages for breaching a contract provision regarding grant of rights would be narrower–how much, if any, revenue was lost due to losing the broadcast rights.  But, even if the measures were identical, the damages would not necessarily be greater.  And, without an exit fee, litigation would be required to reach that determination.  But the main point to take away at this juncture is that any party can breach a contract, including a party to a grant of rights agreement.

Second, it is plausible that the grant of rights could be “avoided” rather than breached.  If the Big 10 wanted Texas, the grant of rights Texas signed only relates to its home games.  The only rights the Big XII has relate to those games.  A game featuring Texas @ Iowa State is irrelevant to Texas’s grant of rights.  The Big 10 would be able to televise Texas @ Indiana or Texas @ Ohio State.  The Big 10 would not be able to televise Michigan @ Texas.  Instead, the Big XII could (and would) televise that game.

To be sure, there is little incentive for ESPN or Fox to want to switch conference members around within their broadcast rights.  But the Big 10 has an additional wrinkle–its own network.  If Texas left the Big XII for the Big 10, the BTN could receive better games, meaning better ratings and more revenue.  Texas @ Michigan State on the BTN is better than Purdue @ Michigan State.  And even if the Texas game was on ESPN, that would still slide a better game down to the BTN.  Along the same lines, with the Pac-12 owning its own network, landing Texas would juice up the ratings.

The real question is how Texas benefits.  Well, first and foremost, the Big 10 would have to agree to not let the absence of a full TV schedule lead to a different payout.  If Texas is currently receiving $20M from the Big XII, the Big 10 would have to give Texas at least that amount–even if Texas did not pull its own weight for several years.  With the Big 10 projecting $40M in revenue per team soon, each school could give up ~$5M and create a pool of to pay for Texas and Texas Tech to not lose money by switching.  It would be temporary–once the grant of rights expired, the Big 10 would have that much more of a valuable property.  It would be an investment.

It would certainly not be any more of an investment than what the Big 10 is doing with Rutgers and Maryland.  There is no certainty that those mediocre athletic schools will pay for themselves.  In contrast, Texas would certainly pay for itself.  The familiar mantra around Frank the Tank is that these are 100 year decisions.  If so, 12 years of a grant of rights is only another speed bump.  If the Big 10 believes in its ability to generate TV revenue with its model, then snagging Texas could be worth the initial investment.

Third, getting back to damages, things could get interesting.  In the context of an Iowa State, would the Big XII really care?  It might be able to lure a replacement that added value.

With a Texas, the Big XII would most definitely care.  If the Big XII is mortally wounded, damages might be easier to ascertain.  If the powers-that-be lowered the Big XII TV revenue, that would make for easy calculations.  That could get ugly.  But that would be subject to litigation–not all that different from exit fees.  If Texas & Tech were willing to pay $15M/year between them for 12 years–is it worth fighting the fight?  Either way, Texas would be gone and there would be nervousness within the Big XII ranks.

Would the Big 10 actually take Texas?  Probably not.  But if the Big 10 became convinced that the Big XII was going to encroach on its present or future properties, i.e. Virginia Tech and Florida State, all bets are off.  The Big 10 could always try to get Texas and Florida State first, allowing the ACC and Big XII to sort out who gets to be the 4th conference.  Two huge recruiting and population areas opening up, with $$$ to follow.  Imagine adding Texas, Texas Tech, Florida State, and Miami as part of an 18-team package. If you are the Big 10, imagine being able to offer the western teams a trip to Texas, while offering the eastern teams a trip to Florida.  An academic hit, to be sure, with FSU and Texas Tech.  But is this any more unrealistic than any other 18 or 20 team expansion scenario?

Will it happen?  Probably not.  Or maybe.  Who knows?  As less time remains on the grant of rights with each successive year, the cost for trying to lure Texas out will decrease.  The looming damages would decrease.  In 5 years, you are looking at damages for only 7 years.  In a 100-year decision, that is a mere moment.

But the only point is that a grant of rights does not guarantee that realignment will not happen.  It might not be feasible for schools like Oklahoma State and West Virginia to change affiliation.  But, in the right situation, the grant of rights will not prevent it.  Everything comes down to money.  With big enough money at stake, anything can happen–even with a grant of rights.  The Confidential’s verdict on a grant of rights: helpful, but not a panacea.

ACC Basketball Rankings: December 10, 2012

This is particularly complex with Pitt, Louisville, Notre Dame, and Syracuse not yet in the ACC, but it can still be done.  This is how the Confidential ranks the ACC basketball teams as of December 10, 2012:

1Duke (9-0)–The Blue Devils are hated by many.  But you cannot deny how successful this season has gone.  An impressive 9-0.

2. Syracuse (8-0)–The Orange have two good victories, but no truly great ones.  A decent OOC slate, but the real meat comes in the Big East regular season.

3. Louisville (8-1)–The ACC’s newest addition has only lost to Duke.  A win over Missouri is the big victory on the schedule.

4.Pittsburgh (9-1)--The Panthers are looking to rebound after last year’s disappointing season.  Only loss is to a very very good Michigan team.

5. Notre Dame (8-1)–The Irish lost to St. Joseph’s, which is not uber-embarrassing.  Still, that has them behind several teams.  The win over Kentucky was nice, but less impressive now.

6. Maryland (7-1)–The Terps have been good, losing only to Kentucky.  Still waiting on an impressive win though.

7. North Carolina State (6-2)–The Wolfpack have been somewhat disappointing at only 6-2.  But the losses are not awful and they do have a win over surprising UConn.

8.Virginia Tech (7-1)–Despite losing to WVU, the Hokies have decent wins, such as Iowa and Oklahoma State.  Not too bad.

9. North Carolina (7-2)–As good as 7-2 looks, the Tar Heels have not beaten anyone of note.  The best win might be Mississippi State, a lower tier SEC team.

10. Miami (5-1)–Miami’s win over Michigan State was very impressive.  Need to see the Hurricanes against major competition a few more times before having them elevate over the teams ahead of them.

11. Virginia (8-2)The Wahoos struggled in the first few games, but are rounding into form.  With wins over Tennessee and Wisconsin, look for this team to rise to the top half.

12. Georgia Tech (6-2)–No shame in the two losses, but it’s hard to find even a decent win for the Yellow Jackets.  Time will tell.

13. Clemson (5-3)–The Tigers have tough losses–Gonzaga, Illinois, and Arizona.  This team may peak late in the season.

14. Florida State (5-4)–At 5-4, the Seminoles are easily the ACC’s disappointment so far.  The losses to Mercer and South Alabama stand out.

15. Wake Forest (4-5)–The Demon Deacons did beat Mercer, but few other teams.  The losses are not horrible, but just way too many to get to NIT-level play.

16. Boston College (4-5)-Losses to Charleston and Bryant land Boston College in its familiar, cellar position.  So it goes in Beantown.

Right/wrong?  Disagree?  If not, let us know.

Big 10 Looking East For Expansion

Amid all the rumors of this team or that team being lured into the largesse of the Big Ten, the latest word is that, notwithstanding the additions of Rutgers and Maryland, Big Ten expansion into the East remains on the table.  Only the Big Ten is apparently looking a lot farther east than one might have expected.  A Northwestern blog is reporting that, not only is the Big Ten considering adding schools, it is considering the addition of six schools.

While Frank the Tank speculates on Florida State, the major development is that the Big 10 envisions four, 5-school pods, with one being made up exclusively of teams from east.  As in way east.  Here are the five favorites for that far eastern pod:

  • University of Pune (India).  With 500,000 students enrolled, this would, by far, be the largest university in the Big 10.  Assuming roughly 75,000 graduates per year, Big Ten Network executives project that it will be difficult for any local cable carrier to not carry the BTN on basic cable.  Wikipedia has this to say about student life at what the Big 10 expansion committee amusingly refers to as “Pune State”–“It is very challenging in PU. I worked hard and came out with flying colors but story is not same for everyone.”  Sounds like an SEC student.  But, lest you think “Pune State” is only churning out telemarketers and electrical good troubleshooters, the school has well-respected colleges in all the major fields.  For information on Pune football, see here.
  • University of the Punjab (Pakistan).  Founded in 1882, the University of the Punjab has a healthy 450,000 students enrolled.  The Big Ten apparently envisions that it can capitalize on the friendly political rivalry between India and Pakistan to elevate Pune-Punjab into the next Michigan-Ohio State.  Indeed, the schools already have some bad blood, apparently originating from one school referring to the other as its “little brother” following a cricket victory.  A Big Ten source notes that an invitation to the school is not a guarantee, but the major proponents see the school as a “Purdue in the Punjab.”  Or vice-versa.  For more information on Punjab football, see here.
  • Peking University (China).  Despite having only 30,000 students, Peking University was the very first modern university in China.  The Big Ten likens Peking to a public Northwestern, with a small student body but the high quality that one comes to expect from anything with the words “Made in China” on it.  The plan is to use Peking to capture the central region of China, which is estimated to have eleventy billion television households.  If there is a drawback for Peking, it is the absence of a football team at this time.  However, a Big Ten source dismissed this issue: “We just took Rutgers, didn’t we?”  Touche, Mr. Anonymous Big Ten source.
  • University of Tokyo (Japan).  Lest you think the Big Ten’s expansion plans were based solely on the “P” book from a set of encyclopedia, the Big Ten is looking strongly at Tokyo.  Admittedly, there is some urgency to add Tokyo.  With the Big East’s recent rumored addition of Hawaii, they will certainly be looking for a Pacific Rim partner.  Tokyo fits the urban university model that makes made the Big East a great good satisfactory conference.  With nearly 14,000,000 people living in Tokyo, Big Ten Network bean counters are literally drooling.  With an 80.3 in research, this website lists Tokyo as #1 in research among Asian universities, which has strong appeal to the Big Ten’s CIC research consortium.  That’s right, an 80.3!  That’s a lot of dongs or yen or whatever.  Look, the Confidential likes pie charts much better than bar charts.  Sorry.  For more on Tokyo football, see here.
  • University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong).  The UHK boasts that it is “the oldest tertiary education institution in Hong Kong.”  Founded in 1910 (the year Greg Oden was really born), the UFK fits the Big Ten mold of a flagship university.  The UHK will have to invest some funds to expand the Stanley Ho Sport Centre to accommodate the 40,000 Nebraska fans that go to every road football game.  But it looks like the Henry Fok Swimming Pool already looks ready to host a Big Ten swim meet.  And the academic types already love the UHK–a University so passionate about research that it devoted an entire website tab to the subject.  It is unclear whether UHK has a football team, but Bobby Petrino’s father indicates that there is mutual interest between the school and his son.

So those are the five leading candidates right now.  If true, this expansion is sure to anger some of the American schools that were hoping for an invitation.  But the Big Ten’s mantra has been about expanding into new, vibrant markets.  With the United States meandering from recession to recession, it is clear that the Big Ten needs to be looking at tomorrow’s markets from a population and financial standpoint.  So, with apologies to schools throughout the southeast United States, the Far East makes perfect sense–as in dollars and cents–for the Big Ten.  These are 100-year decisions, after all.

Expected Pods:

Far East: Pune, Punjab, Peking, Tokyo, Hong Kong

East: Penn State, Maryland, Rutgers, Ohio State, [20th team, TBD]

Central: Michigan, Michigan State, Purdue, Indiana, Northwestern

Far Central: Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois

Protected rivalries are Northwestern-Illinois, Michigan-Ohio State, Rutgers-Peking. 

Exit Fees and Liquidated Damages

Many people are confident that the ACC will be able to enforce its exit fee against Maryland.  Many people are confident that the ACC will not be able to enforce its exit fee against Maryland.  Regardless of which side is correct, it is important to understand the issue.

Most helpful to a non-lawyer is this recent article from the businessofcollegesports.com.  The article provides a great layman’s understanding of something called liquidated damages:

In legal terms, conference exit fees are known as liquidated damages.  Liquidated damages provisions are commonly added to contracts.  They set the amount a party to the contract must pay in the event it breaches the contract.  Liquidated damages provisions are useful because they theoretically save the parties the time and expense of litigating the amount of damages caused by the breach.

But, the amount of liquidated damages specified in a contract cannot be randomly selected.  Courts will generally only enforce liquidated damages provisions if (1) the anticipated damages in the event of a breach are difficult to ascertain at the time of contracting, and (2) the amount of liquidated damages is a reasonable estimate of the actual damages that would likely be caused by a breach.  If a liquidated damages provision does not meet this test it is deemed a penalty and is unenforceable.

The ACC’s current exit fee is not $50,000,000.  Instead, as the article notes, the ACC’s exit fee is “three times the conference’s total operating budget at the time of withdrawal.”  As for Maryland, this means the amount is roughly $52M.

Where the Confidential differs is the analysis of whether the exit fees satisfy (1) and (2).  The author does not seem to question (1).  Indeed, how exactly does one quantify the damages where a founding member of a conference leaves?  With all the conference realignment discussion, people talk about TV revenue.  But what about the unquantifiable damage to a conference when it is perceived to be unstable?  When there are daily rumors regarding this or that member leaving?  When there are discussions about whether the conference will cease to exist.  When schools like Wake Forest have, really, no other option at all in the conference realignment scenario.  Where it is questionable whether Pitt, BC, Syracuse, and other schools are certain to have a landing spot.  Does ESPN want to renegotiate now, when it might have to renegotiate in two weeks if two schools leave?  Do kids want to play for a school that may go from “ACC,” as it is currently thought of,” to its current weakened position in comparison to other conferences?  If UVA and Georgia Tech leave the ACC, what does that do for Florida State’s academic reputation?  How can you quantify these things?

You cannot.  Which is where exit fees come from.  Instead of trying to figure that all out, you agree on a number ahead of time.

As for (2), the article states “that [t]he requirement to pay three times the conference’s operating budget does not appear to be related in any way to the actual amount of damages the ACC would suffer if a member withdraws.”  Liquidated damages clauses often just state a sum certain.  The ACC provision is actually tethered to something that relates to the size and wealth of the ACC at the time a member departs.  If the ACC grows and becomes even more successful, it has more to lose.  If the ACC contracts, it has less to lose and the liquidated damages (exit fees) decrease.  Moreover, the schools have a say in the conference’s operating budget.  If the schools want the conference to scale back operations, they can do so.

Perhaps the ACC could have tied its exit fees to TV revenue.  But this excludes the damage to the ACC’s name.  Is there any question that swapping Louisville for Maryland is a loss with respect to academics, cohesion, and the appearance of the ACC?  The ACC has been damaged beyond anything that can be measured in TV revenue.  The ACC is perceived to be on life support, forcing Presidents to make statements regarding rumors, etc.  Maybe a more reasonable number would be 1 or 2 or 1.5 times the operating budget, but the operating budget is a conservative measure to calculate damages.

Moreover, people analyzing this situation speak in terms of “black and white.”  Lawyers, at least good ones, know that life (and the law) are not black and white.  As the litigation moves forward, the parties will likely have a sense as to where the judge is leaning on legal issues.  Will the judge allow the jury to resolve the question of whether the exit fee is reasonable?  Will the judge decide it as a matter of law? On an issue like this, the judge is likely to defer a definitive ruling and give the parties a chance to settle based on an expectation of what these rulings would be.  In the meantime, nobody should presume that a certain result is inevitable.  It is doubtful that there will even be a result.  Someone will blink.

 

Florida State & Expansion (Update)

Frank the Tank is now fanning the fires with respect to a Florida State move to the Big 10.

But the ACC Presidents decided to jointly issue a statement pledging allegiance to the ACC.  The text is as follows:

“We, the undersigned presidents of the Atlantic Coast Conference, wish to express our commitment to preserve and protect the future of our outstanding league.  We want to be clear that the speculation about ACC schools in negotiations or considering alternatives to the ACC are totally false.  The presidents of the ACC are united in our commitment to a strong and enduring conference.  The ACC has long been a leader in intercollegiate athletics, both academically and athletically, and the constitution of our existing and future member schools will maintain the ACC’s position as one of the nation’s premier conferences.”

Obviously, this is not a binding contract or anything.  But it is noteworthy that some of the most desirable expansion targets initiated this process.  Regardless of is value, it is an unprecedented move.  This is negative, because such moves have not previously been necessary.  It is positive because the Presidents are trying to assure each other that they do not need to try to beat each other to the punch.  Unless and until there is a grant of rights (which the Confidential believes is not insurmountable), the rumors are not likely to stop.  Indeed, one wonders how much of the realignment rumor mill is being created by those who recruit against the ACC.

 

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