[NU Sports] Fwd: From my UT Insider Newsletter
hakirsch at aol.com
hakirsch at aol.com
Mon Jun 14 17:34:18 CDT 2010
Hard to view kansas as anywhere near "The Pacific". Besides changing the "10", maybe need to change the "Pacific"
Harry
Harry
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message-----
From: AJWDBW at aol.com
Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 15:02:21
To: <nwu-sports at romaine.tssi.com>
Subject: [NU Sports] Fwd: From my UT Insider Newsletter
>From UT Insider Newsletter
UT Wants to Go to Pac 10, But Legislature Wants to Hold Hearings On Move
The Texas Board of Regents meets at 11 a.m. Tuesday and was expected to
put its stamp of approval on the Longhorns move to the Pac 10, but the Texas
Legislature is threatening the move.
Texas was ready to lead Oklahoma, Texas Tech, Oklahoma State and maybe
Texas A&M into the Pac 10, and still might do it, but the Legislature wants
to hold a hearing on it Wednesday.
Rep. Dan Branch, R-Dallas, who chairs the House Higher Education
Comnmittee, said he has talked to the presidents of Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech,
and is confident they won't take action until the legislative hearing.
It would be nice if the Legislature would let the schools' governing
bodies do what is best for the schools, but Branch doesn't feel that way.
Texas A&M is considering going to the SEC instead of the Pac 10, and if
the Aggies keep considering that option, someone like Kansas might get their
spot in the Pac 10.
The new schools, plus Colorado, which joined the Pac 10 last week, will
join Arizona and Arizona State to make up a new eight-team division.
The Pac 10 voted to expand because the league wanted a lucrative
championship game and also wanted a better television contract.
The Big 10 and SEC have much better TV contracts than the Pac 10 and Big
12, but putting California and Texas, the two most populous states in the
country, together in one conference will command big-time TV bucks.
California has about 37 million people and Texas has about 25 million
people. That is 62 million folks in just two states, and is about 20% of the
total U. S. population.
Washington is No. 13 with slightly more than 6.6 million, Arizona is No.
14 in total population with 6.6 million, Colorado is No. 22 with 5 million,
Oregon is No. 28 with 3.8 million and Oklahoma is No. 29 with 3.7
million.
Add all those states' population and you will have 87.7 million people, or
about 14% of the total United States' population in the new Pac 10.
The SEC states add up to 54 million, and the Big 10 states have about 67.5
million, and both those leagues have television contracts that pay their
teams a lot more than the Big 12 teams or Pac 10 teams get.
But 2011 is the year the Pac 10 renegotiates its television contract, and
it will have much more to sell with all those new people and new TV sets.
For those who go to the games, the distances to the new schools will be
greater, but almost all of the Pac 10 schools are either in big cities that
have airports or they are very close to big cities that have airports.
That is not the case in the Big 12. It is a conference where fans have to
fly to a big city and then drive for one to three hours to get to the
school.
Austin is by far the biggest city in the Big 12, although Colorado is in
Boulder, which is only 20 miles from Denver.
But Missouri, Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Kansas and Kansas State are all
more than an hour away from a major city with an airport.
The move won't affect the 2010 schedules and it probably won't affect the
2011 schedules, but it oculd.
The great thing about all this is that Nebraska started it by jumping to
the Big 10, and Texas just reacted by going to the Pac 10.
The new Big 10, which is really 12 because Penn State was the 11th member
and Nebraska is the 12th member, will have more people in its states with
Nebraska coming aboard, but it still won't be able to match the new Pac 10.
Another great thing about all this is that the Big 10 and SEC are going to
have a very hard time coming up with enough expansion teams in surrounding
states to come close to the new Pac 10 in population.
The guys who run the TV networks and negotiate the TV contracts are good
at counting, and those nearly 90 million people in the states of the new Pac
10 are impressive and will be just as impressive at contract time.
With the two eight-team divisions in the Pacific Conference, the schools
in each division will play seven games against each other and probably two
games against the teams in the other division, one at home and one on the
road.
Then, the next year, the two teams on the road will complete the
home-and-home series, and the third year will have two other teams in the other
league coming aboard for a home-and-home series.
That will mean Texas will play all eight of trhe teams in the other
division twice in an eight-year span.
Paul E. Szurek
Chief Financial Officer
Biltmore Farms, LLC
One Town Square Boulevard
Suite 330
Asheville, NC 28803
828-209-2000
828-209-2150 fax
_pszurek at biltmorefarms.com_ (mailto:pszurek at biltmorefarms.com)
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