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ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
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RamblinRedWolf44 Offline
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Post: #1
ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
According to this guy...

http://thebiglead.com/2016/01/14/espn-co...-football/



College Football is undergoing a TV revenue bubble. ESPN is overpaying for content – be it conference deals, bowl games, or the playoff – to muscle out competition. With the cable model changing, ESPN’s outlook looks anything but promising.

ESPN has billions committed to rights deals in multiple sports through the next decade. However, its revenue stream, based on widespread, bundled cable subscriptions, is fading. ESPN has lost millions of subscribers the past two years due to outright cord-cutting.* Were cable to be unbundled, a survey found that more than 50 percent of users would cancel expensive ($8 per month) ESPN/ESPN2. At least one analyst sees ESPN tanking Disney’s stock.

We may already be seeing significant early effects. ESPN’s College Football postseason, for a number of reasons, was a ratings debacle. Perhaps more indicative was Monday Night Football viewership on ESPN declining for the second-straight year, while NFL viewership on all other networks increased.

We’re only at the cusp of what appears to be a sea change. What happens to cable when there are other, viable, and faster Internet options?

The future impact of cord-cutting may be far more dramatic. Where does that leave college football? The sport’s present sugar daddy ESPN, at the very least, will be shelling out far less. The same cord-cutting that harms ESPN may kill off the viewer-less conference TV networks as constituted. College football may see a finite, diminished revenue pool, concurrent with increased business costs as it resolves its amateurism conundrum and perhaps deals with increased insurance premiums as medical research continues.

Projecting specifics is murky. But, the broad direction is clear. College Football will operate more like a business, optimizing itself to create revenue (rather than just distributing it). We can expect far greater centralization and collective action. Many of the sport’s lovable little inefficiencies may be cast aside.

Without cable, college football would be attracting viewers, not trying to collect what amounts to a college football tax over the largest population footprint. The focus would move toward producing the most quality games possible. That impetus could precipitate radical changes to scheduling and the way the sport is structured.

Jim Harbaugh coughs into his hand then shakes Derek Jeters

For an example, let’s look at Michigan in 2016. Jim Harbaugh had a promising first season. Most of that team returns. Many are projecting the Wolverines into the playoff. Michigan is Michigan. It’s safe to assume they will be the most discussed story entering 2016.

Now, check out Michigan’s 2016 schedule. Teams in our “way-too-early” Top 25 are in bold.

Hawaii
UCF
Colorado
Penn State
Wisconsin
at Rutgers
BYE
Illinois
at Michigan State
Maryland
at Iowa
Indiana
at Ohio State

If college football were the NFL (or a mere competent business), Michigan would get the “Patriots” treatment. Their schedule would be flush with high profile games. They’d be playing in prime time as often as feasible. College Football is not the NFL.

Presuming Wisconsin is good, Michigan probably plays one competitive football game before meeting Michigan State Halloween weekend. There’s no reason for a non-Michigan fan to tune in to at least eight of their games. Despite eight home games, it’s unlikely College GameDay will visit Ann Arbor.

That soft run is great from a competitive perspective. It’s terrible from a business one, especially in a potential new environment dependent on active viewers. Let’s say you’re the casual Michigan fan who shows up for big games. Are you buying a year-round subscription or are you going to a bar for those games?

Scheduling must improve to create more premium content. We’d guess the improvement will need to be more substantial than an extra conference game or one mandated Power 5 opponent. We’re likely looking at another round of realignment after the TV contracts end.

The same realignment tensions reemerge that were extant before the last round of contracts. Texas isn’t happy with its underwhelming schedule. The ACC football schools are frustrated. This time, the pressure isn’t being part of the awesome windfall coming. It may be more existential, protecting what schools have, or fighting for limited resources. It’s easy to see a Big 12/ACC merger, perhaps with Notre Dame, to create a fourth super conference.

For the scenario’s sake, the B1G grabs UNC and UVA. The SEC grabs Virginia Tech and N.C. State. Some of the smaller, less valuable football schools get shafted.

East: Clemson, FSU, Miami, Notre Dame, West Virginia, Georgia Tech, Pittsburgh

West: Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Baylor, TCU, Louisville

Now it’s the Power 4. Those leagues could close off scheduling, break away, and with title games form a de facto 8-team playoff.

That change feels substantial. Of course, it may just be a modest scenario. Cable TV could be dead in ten years. College football may be streaming itself (or partnering with Google etc. to do so). The resource pool could be very limited. How strong is traditional conference affinity? Could we see an NFL-style “Super League” with 30-40 teams and set scheduling?

The ESPN/Cable well appears to be drying up. College Football facing a potential revenue crisis appears to be more “probable” than “possible.” It’s not clear how the sport, as constituted, would weather that without radical changes.

* For what it’s worth, I’m turning 32. Most of my friends are college-educated, relatively affluent, and on the older end of millennial. None are egregious, anti-television hippies. Not a single one of them has had a cable TV subscription since college.
(This post was last modified: 01-14-2016 04:39 PM by RamblinRedWolf44.)
01-14-2016 04:37 PM
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ark30inf Offline
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Post: #2
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
If they think they can form a 30-team mini-NFL model more power to them. They will be competing with the NFL to some extent so good luck with it.

The rest of us can reform college football and return it to some semblance of amateur college athletics.
01-14-2016 05:00 PM
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panama Offline
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
College Presidents still run this show which is still why this has not happened
01-14-2016 05:26 PM
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49RFootballNow Online
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-14-2016 05:26 PM)panama Wrote:  College Presidents still run this show which is still why this has not happened

And they have done a downright ****** job of it too.
01-15-2016 12:11 AM
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ark30inf Offline
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 12:11 AM)49RFootballNow Wrote:  
(01-14-2016 05:26 PM)panama Wrote:  College Presidents still run this show which is still why this has not happened

And they have done a downright ****** job of it too.

I remember when they made a big deal of taking control back from the AD's because things had gotten out of hand.

What a crock that turned out to be.
01-15-2016 12:24 AM
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svvandal Offline
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Post: #6
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
I cut the cord and signed up for Sling with the sports package. ESPN already has their Watch ESPN app and will launch a standalone service this year. They make A FORTUNE.
01-15-2016 12:45 AM
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49RFootballNow Online
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 12:24 AM)ark30inf Wrote:  
(01-15-2016 12:11 AM)49RFootballNow Wrote:  
(01-14-2016 05:26 PM)panama Wrote:  College Presidents still run this show which is still why this has not happened

And they have done a downright ****** job of it too.

I remember when they made a big deal of taking control back from the AD's because things had gotten out of hand.

What a crock that turned out to be.

Honestly the vast majority of university leaders couldn't tell you who their athletics teams' starting point guards or quarterbacks are. They usually never played organized sports on any level and they don't understand sports management. P5 U leaders only care when there's a scandal and G5 and below U leaders think cuts in athletics are a great place to find budget balancing revenue.

Sad thing is there's no one on a campus better to replace them in NCAA decision making. The ADs and Coaches would get downright criminal with it if they had control. When the only options are criminals vs blithering idiots, no one is a good option. This analogy also works for politics as well.
01-15-2016 12:53 AM
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panama Offline
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Post: #8
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 12:11 AM)49RFootballNow Wrote:  
(01-14-2016 05:26 PM)panama Wrote:  College Presidents still run this show which is still why this has not happened

And they have done a downright ****** job of it too.
I am thinking most P5 fans are happy

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01-15-2016 09:05 AM
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MWC Tex Offline
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Post: #9
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 12:45 AM)svvandal Wrote:  I cut the cord and signed up for Sling with the sports package. ESPN already has their Watch ESPN app and will launch a standalone service this year. They make A FORTUNE.

I'm in the same boat and with Sling there is no set contract so you can cancel anytime without penalty.

However, I think more cord cutters are coming and its not always because of the internet. Quite a few people are rediscovering OTA and now with the digital broadcasts in HD and that you can also have sub-channels. The majority of people in the larger metros can get 30 or more stations (even if 10 of them are religious or shopping) and have realize that the content on OTA is enough for them and can fill out the holes with the internet TV like Hulu, Netflix.
Keep the eye on the American Sports Network. Even if their 24hr channel is on the sub-channels they are showing sports that the other type of sports channels didn't show when they tried OTA (NBC Universal Sports come to mind) as they didn't show any college basketball or football games.
01-15-2016 09:21 AM
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EigenEagle Offline
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Post: #10
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-14-2016 04:37 PM)RamblinRedWolf44 Wrote:  Projecting specifics is murky. But, the broad direction is clear. College Football will operate more like a business, optimizing itself to create revenue (rather than just distributing it). We can expect far greater centralization and collective action. Many of the sport’s lovable little inefficiencies may be cast aside.


And what might these be?

Do people think that Alabama and Ohio State schedule FCS and G5 teams out of the goodness of their heart when they don't have the freedom to schedule other big-name teams?

Does anyone think an "every team for themself" model for TV or postseason money will work or be accepted, either?
01-15-2016 09:27 AM
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panama Offline
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 09:21 AM)MWC Tex Wrote:  
(01-15-2016 12:45 AM)svvandal Wrote:  I cut the cord and signed up for Sling with the sports package. ESPN already has their Watch ESPN app and will launch a standalone service this year. They make A FORTUNE.

I'm in the same boat and with Sling there is no set contract so you can cancel anytime without penalty.

However, I think more cord cutters are coming and its not always because of the internet. Quite a few people are rediscovering OTA and now with the digital broadcasts in HD and that you can also have sub-channels. The majority of people in the larger metros can get 30 or more stations (even if 10 of them are religious or shopping) and have realize that the content on OTA is enough for them and can fill out the holes with the internet TV like Hulu, Netflix.
Keep the eye on the American Sports Network. Even if their 24hr channel is on the sub-channels they are showing sports that the other type of sports channels didn't show when they tried OTA (NBC Universal Sports come to mind) as they didn't show any college basketball or football games.
Sub channels are just another channel OTA. It's not a big deal as a TV watcher.

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01-15-2016 09:45 AM
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billybobby777 Offline
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RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-14-2016 05:00 PM)ark30inf Wrote:  If they think they can form a 30-team mini-NFL model more power to them. They will be competing with the NFL to some extent so good luck with it.

The rest of us can reform college football and return it to some semblance of amateur college athletics.

I could live with this. The vast majority of us will remain as part of the historical college football model that Americans have loved for 125 years. The 30 "schools" that form NFL lite will be hurting themselves long term. I wouldn't donate a penny to a school that was part of that 30....Even if Iowa (the state I was born and where many of my family members went and competed in athletics at) was part of that 30. I wouldn't watch the games. I'd have no part in that nonsense. I don't like the NFL. I sure as heck wouldn't like NFL lite. Cheers!
01-15-2016 11:58 AM
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Hail The Blue Offline
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Post: #13
RE: ESPN, Cable TV will be Dead; College Football will become modern NFL
(01-15-2016 12:45 AM)svvandal Wrote:  I cut the cord and signed up for Sling with the sports package. ESPN already has their Watch ESPN app and will launch a standalone service this year. They make A FORTUNE.

I signed up for sling about a year ago and never looked back. Plenty of content, especially when supplemented with an OTA (Fox, NBC, ABC, CBS) and Netflix.

ESPN is losing the subscribers that only were subscribers because they paid for cable and it came with it. I doubt they are losing a lot of VIEWERS overall. And if they are losing actual viewers, its because their content sucks.

People will always want to watch sports, find an easy, accessible way for that to happen, and the money will follow.
01-15-2016 04:16 PM
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