The Confidential

The ACC Sports Blog

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New Contributor: Syracuse

Hi Everyone!
My name is Tom and I will be contributing to the website on a regular basis. I am a huge college sports fan even though the Northeast is dominated by professional sports. As a Syracuse fan I have followed conference realignment with great interest since the first Big East departures to the ACC a decade ago. I had always hoped Syracuse would eventually wind up in the ACC . In addition to following college football and basketball, I have great interest in lacrosse and the Olympic Sports of the ACC. I think there is more on the conference realignment front coming and hope the ACC comes out stronger. I look forward to responses to my contributions and interaction with the other ACC correspondents!
Thanks,
Tom

New Atlantic Coast Confidential Member Added

Good afternoon ladies & gents!

My name is Jeff and I’ll be contributing to the Atlantic Coast Confidential website on a weekly basis moving forward.  I wanted to give you a brief introduction before I get started.  First of all I’m a huge sports fanatic & a big stat guy.  I prefer college over professional sports, but I like it all, especially the ACC.  I’m a South Carolinian and partial to the Clemson Tigers, however I find a way to pull for one team in nearly every match-up.  Some of my earliest childhood memories involve attending Clemson football games with my family, particularly my grandfather and cousin.  After years of dedication, I now bleed Clemson orange.  In my spare time I like to hit the gym, play golf, do anything involving good friends or the outdoors, all while giving you a new sports article to read each week.  I look forward to reading your comments and receiving your feedback in the near future.

Thanks,
Jeff

Happy New Year!

The Confidential took a nice, long holiday break and celebrated its end with the flu.  Welcome to 2013!

Actually, 2013 looks to bring some significant changes to the Confidential.  In addition to general entries, the Confidential is looking to add a “corresponding contributor” for each school.  As this is gradually implemented, there should end up being a rather significant increase in content.  (And hopefully fewer slow periods for reasons like vacation and the flu!).  Louisville, Pitt, Syracuse, and Notre Dame correspondents are immediately welcome, even though formal addition to the ACC is in the future.  A Maryland correspondent is fine too–at least until the Terps head off to the Big 10.

As previously noted, if you are interested, please send an email to ezdozen@yahoo.com.  If you like to write, and care about your school, this is a chance to be a part of something pretty fun.

 

 

Call for Contributors

The Confidential is pondering a move to a different format for 2013.  Looking to add a contributing correspondent for each ACC school.  If you are interested, please send an email to ezdozen@yahoo.com.  If you have writing or blogging experience, please let us know.  Of course, experience is not nearly as important as being a sports-fanatic and diehard fan of your school.

Thanks!

The Big 10 Universities: Integrity for Sale Long Before the Big Ten Network

Look, the Confidential understands conference realignment.  The Big East was a dumpster fire for several years after the defections of Boston College, Virginia Tech, and Miami.  If Maryland cannot balance its budget, imagine how Pitt, Syracuse, West Virginia, Utah, Rutgers, and TCU felt trying to do the same on 1/2 the revenue (or less).  The Confidential also understands that the TV revenue at issue is real and can fairly be a factor in the realignment decision.  As blogs like Frank the Tank pointed out, you cannot look at expansion without considering the impact on TV revenue.  This is the very concept that makes Rutgers and its athletic futility more valuable than UConn and its multiple national championships and BCS appearance.  The Big 10’s selection of Nebraska showed that on-field product still mattered.  But this latest expansion into Maryland and New Jersey is solely about money.  Unfortunately, this is nothing new–it is just more of the same money-obsession from large, public universities that thrive on research dollars.

In fact, if you look at Frank the Tank’s blog, you’ll see that research dollars are discussed with pride.  A university engaging in $300,000,000 a year in research is deemed “better” than a university that only takes in $100,000,000 a year.  There are rankings and everything, both for comparing current Big 10 teams and differentiating prospective ones.  Apparently, the only criteria for measuring research is the volume.  And the measurement of volume is dollars.  The more the better, regardless of where it comes from and whether it is useful research.  Well, this same approach now applies to the Big Ten and its television network.  It does not matter what is being shown on television, it only matters that it is being shown on television and generating revenue.  Much like research dollars, the only metric that matters is revenue.

The problem, of course, is that research pretends to be objective.  But, as Discover magazine noted several years ago, the trend in research is vastly different than it was approximately 50 years ago:

In 1965, the federal government financed more than 60 percent of all R&D in the United States. By 2006, the balance had flipped, with 65 percent of R&D in this country being funded by private interests.

The conflict of interest becomes obvious.  If research is “for sale,” the integrity of that research soon follows.  If State University takes the $10,000,000 research grant from Conglomerate X, can it conclude that Conglomerate X’s product is dangerous and still get a similar grant the following year?  When you hear that study indicating that using bleach kills 99% of harmful germs, you then hear that it was a study financed by a company that sells bleach.  When you hear that studies show pork to be a healthy alternative to chicken, we the hear that the study was financed by the pork industry.  And so on.

None of this is meant to condemn all research, much less any specific research.  We all hope that cures for diseases are around the corner.  Of course, there is a problem when there is a financial incentive to never find that cure.  If you get $10,000,000 a year for cancer research, curing cancer will mean a reduction in revenue.  This is a corporate conflict of interest problem.  It should not be trickling down to Universities beholden to corporate research.

Strictly speaking, there is no reason why Universities cannot be corporations and maximize revenue to the exclusion of any other particular moral obligations.  But there IS a problem with Universities doing so and pretending to be something other than for-profit industries.  The Confidential just noted the absurdity in not taxing Division I sports revenue.  Well, there needs to be taxation on Universities that are engaging in this level of research.  If you want to be a business, be a business.  If you want to be a tax-free educational institution, cut off the flow from corporate interests.

Although one has to move yet another step beyond sports for a moment, ask yourself where the United States stands in 2012 compared to 1965.  While there are many reasons for it, we no longer “trust” government.  Does anyone see “FDA Approval” and feel comfortable?  As Yale Scientific Magazine notes, the FDA admitted to wrongdoing in 2010 with respect to the approval of a medical device.  If you are not skeptical, go get yourself some Vioxx.  Can we even trust science any more?  Perhaps not if the science is being funded only by interested parties.

Like research, we hope that athletics is also objective.  While people watch figure skating and gymnastics with their subjective scoring in great numbers, many more fans prefer the objectivity of score-based sports.  The better team wins, and you can look at the scoreboard to see who wins.  But as money completely takes over sports, the corresponding loss of integrity and objectivity will suffer.  It is not a surprise that the Big 10 athletic conference cares more about the money it generates than anything else.  This is consistent with the research focus of such Universities.  One has to question when this will, like the FDA, spill over into a lack of integrity on the field.  If all that matters is money, wouldn’t it be prudent and expected for the Big 10 to ensure that 10-0 Ohio State beats 5-5 Maryland in 2018?  Maryland should willingly accept its loss because the following week’s Ohio State-Michigan game will generate more TV revenue, to the benefit of all.  Well, at least as it relates to the only criteria that matters to large, public universities–money.

Carry on, Big 10.  Carry on.

Maryland’s Turn to Hike the Skirt

After several days of rumors, it appears that there is actually some truth to this–Maryland may be leaving the ACC for the Big 10.  ESPN is reporting that Maryland and the Big 10 are in “serious talks.”

This stuff just does not end.

NCAA Watching Tobacco Road

Separated by just several miles, Duke and North Carolina purport to be the class acts of the Atlantic Coast Conference, if not the country.  Unfortunately, the two schools are struggling to stay out of the news regarding their potential violations of NCAA rules.  It is not clear that the two schools will be able to avoid sanctions and penalties.

In fact, although the Confidential previously noted that North Carolina appeared safe, that same entry observed that this situation was fluid.  And now NCAA President Mark Emmert is indicating that North Carolina may not be out of the proverbial woods yet.  Even so, Emmert stopped well short of stating that North Carolina would be sanctioned: “We’ll continue to monitor the situation and see what the facts are as they unfold from the investigations that [UNC] is involved with,” Emmert said. “… And [then we’ll see] if there’s anything further that we need to do at that time.”  Thus, Tar Heels fans (and enemies) can only sit back and wait for more details to emerge.

Speaking of enemies of Chapel Hill, Duke has its own issues.  Former Duke starter Lance Thomas somehow purchased nearly $100,000 during his final year in school.  Emmert noted that the lack of cooperation by Thomas and the jewelry store would not prevent the NCAA from imposing penalties on Duke:

“We certainly could deal with a case where we don’t necessarily have cooperation from the actors, but we still have to rely on facts and rely on well-established information,” Emmert said while making it clear he was speaking in general terms and not specifically about Duke’s situation. “It occasionally drives fans out there crazy because they’ll read in a blog or some other source that this or that happened. But the standards of evidence that we use are pretty darn high because we’re dealing with people’s lives here. … We have to go out and make sure we can verify all that facts, and that’s always a big challenge [without cooperation].”

Importantly, the Thomas season at issue was the year that Duke won the national title, 2009-2010.  So sanctions against Duke could lead to a vacation of that accomplishment.

So, if you hate one or both of Duke or North Carolina, stay tuned.  Emmert and the NCAA are keeping an eye on both situations.

 

 

 

 

The NCAA: Screwing Student-Athletes Whenever Possible

With the denial of John Raymon’s transfer waiver request, the NCAA has proven that, once again, it is a completely out-of-touch organization looking out for everyone EXCEPT the student-athletes it purports to care about.  The Confidential does not know all the details of why Raymon sought a waiver and does not care.  The bottom line is that a kid of roughly 20-years-old was denied the right of changing his mind in a way that virtually no other segment of American society has to endure. If he was a 50-year-old coach, the move from Iowa to Syracuse would be swift and without penalty.

Look, the Confidential understands the transfer rule generally.  If there was no transfer penalty, then the recruitment process would be ongoing year-after-year for players already on rosters.  If that happened, every star player at Iowa State could be “recruited” to finish his final two seasons at Nebraska.  And so on.  That’s just not how American society chooses to operate.

Except… that is EXACTLY how American society chooses to operate.  If an accountant wants to leave his firm, he can give two weeks notice.  If a lawyer wants to start her own practice, she can give two weeks notice and do so.  If an engineering major wants to transfer from Iowa State to Nebraska, he or she can do so without having to defer pondering differential equations for one year.  If the President of Iowa State wants to become the President of Nebraska, he can do so without “sitting out a year.”

Of course, the response to that is that the NCAA is not a normal business.  No, it is not normal.  It is simply made up of institutions, dozens of whom now make $20,000,000 a year in television revenue.  It is made up of institutions who do not balk at asking alums for money to build stadiums.  It is made up of institutions that are willing to pay coaches $1,000,000+ to tell a bunch of young adults what to do on the athletic field.  The NCAA is not “normal business” anymore, it is big business now.  So, NCAA, spare the world your 19th century morals.  You gave those up long ago.

Indeed, the hypocrisy is astounding.  The NCAA does not punish a coach who chooses to take a job at a new institution.  But it DOES impose a transfer penalty on the players that were recruited to play for that very coach at that very school.  So there is freedom of movement for adult coaches, but not the young adult players who foolishly chose to play for a guy that abandons the program.  And that is just the head coach.  What about the assistants that are on the front lines of recruitment and in many cases closer to the players.  Assistant coaches are even more likely to switch universities–voluntarily or involuntarily.  Just ask the coordinators at Houston and Wisconsin that were fired before mid-September.

So… if a 50-year old coach decides to abandon his $1,400,000 a year job at College A to take a $2,200,000 a year job at College B, he can do so without penalty.  If an 19-year old kid second guesses his decision to attend College A, and wants to transfer to College B, he must sit out a year.  Sure, the kid can still transfer.  But he cannot play his sport for one year.  The coach of that same sport need not sit out a year.  The NCAA is holding kids to decisions made on or before reaching adulthood, but allowing adults to have greater freedom of movement.

By the way, the NCAA has only recently decided that multi-year scholarships might be, say, a fair idea.  In the absence of multi-year scholarships, College A has been able to recruit a kid and decide after his first year that his athletic scholarship is revoked.  But the kid cannot revoke his own scholarship and seek one elsewhere.  Again, anything to screw student-athletes.  Fortunately, the vote to allow multi-year scholarships barely passed.  So at least now the kids restrained from transferring have a chance to bind the schools that bind them.

Of course, now the NCAA might want to drop the term “student-athlete.”  The Confidential is not sure what term will be used to describe who the NCAA screws in the future, but the screwing will likely continue unabated.   That’s just what the NCAA does.

 

And then there were two… and soon it will be one. Right?

Since the BCS era began, 9 of the 15 national champions have been undefeated.  This, of course, means that 6 national champions have had losses.  However, once a team loses a game, it invites other parties (voters, computers, etc.) to determine whether it can even play for the national championship.  Ask Oklahoma State about how that worked out last year.  For the ACC, this means that there are only two teams left that control their national championship destiny: Florida State (3-0) and Clemson (3-0).  They play this weekend.  By Saturday evening, the ACC will be down to just one remaining undefeated team.  Or will it…

As noted above, 60% of the recent national champions have been undefeated.  All of those teams have come from BCS conferences.  There are currently a whopping 26 teams from BCS conferences that are undefeated, and 27 if you include Notre Dame.  That seems like a lot, even for this time of year.

Of those 27 teams, only two are from the ACC–FSU and Clemson.  And Clemson travels to FSU this weekend for their annual matchup.  That means that the ACC will be down to its final undefeated team by Saturday night.  To paraphrase Princess Leia: “Help us <insert winner of Saturday’s game>, you’re our only hope.”

And that’s what it comes down to for the ACC right now.  Virginia Tech’s mind numbing loss to Pitt removed a contender.  Miami and North Carolina are talented, but suspended and nowhere near ready for a title run.  Did anyone really think Georgia Tech or Virginia would run the table?  Of course not.  And the rest of the teams?  Please.  Most of them are fighting for mere bowl-eligibility at this point.  So, what was once a three-team race is now down to a two-team race, and soon it will be one.

September is barely gone and the ACC will be down to one national contender.

But, as Lee Corso would say… “not so fast my friend.”

What about Notre Dame?  Notre Dame is undefeated.  They still have to play Michigan, Stanford, Oklahoma, and USC.  If they run THAT table, wow.

But Notre Dame did just announce it was joining the ACC at some point.  Unlike its deal with the Big East, Notre Dame is making a substantially greater commitment to the ACC for football.  In the meantime, Notre Dame’s relationship with the Big East has gone from “sleeping on the couch” to “waiting for lawyers to finalize the divorce.”  If Notre Dame were to run the table, the September partnership would mean that the ACC would have a better right than anyone else to claim some credit for a Notre Dame title.  More so than anyone else (other than Notre Dame, itself, obviously).

So… to paraphrase Yoda, “perhaps there is another.”

And, really, the way things have gone for the ACC in football lately, a convoluted claim to a credit for a national championship by a future partial member is better than what has happened lately.  You take what you can get.

Notre Dame to the ACC in Everything But Football & Exit Fee Raised to $50M

In a move that will undoubtedly provide the ACC substantially secured its future by encouraging Notre Dame to join in all sports, except football.  Equally as important, Notre Dame agreed to play five football games against conference members.  And perhaps most importantly, the ACC Presidents agreed to raise the exit fee to nearly $50M.  A great day for the ACC, which requires no further commentary from the Confidential!

 

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