Just joining the Mountain West who would've been more than happy to take them before all this.
It's a doggie dog world
Just joining the Mountain West who would've been more than happy to take them before all this.
This is the issue I have here.I don’t understand if the mtn west dissolves because 9 of 12 left, why didn’t the Pac12 dissolve when 10 of 12 left? Does it simply come down to bylaws? Couldn’t the 3 remaining mountain west school due to keep the fees owed to the conference?
It’s also the MWC, there might not be enough funds and resources to matter but I do agree it’s an interesting thing that isn’t talked aboutThis is the issue I have here.
In most conferences, the bylaws say as soon as a member school gives notice to leave, they lose voting rights. It was the case with OuT, they did not have a vote on expansion etc. They were not allowed in meetings regarding matters like that.
So in a simple math scenario. The remaining members would need to meet the voting percentage. If say there are 12 members and it takes more than a 50% majority, you need 7 votes. If half those leave and only 6 remain, you need 4 of those remaining members to be the Majority. In this case they must need more like 75% of remaining members.
I think some reporters fail to realize this. But it is possible the MWC doesnt have that in their Bylaws, but that would be unusual.
"...and I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear."It's a doggie dog world
Any court decision that will enable FSU to get out will be related to reduced exit fees, not the GOR itself. I've seen nothing that suggests that FSU has found an exit due to a fault in the GOR (which is why they are now talking settlement with a new GOR expiration date of 2030).
Since the ACC GOR mirrors the B12's, the only way the ACC dissolves is if 1) ESPN declines the 2027 ACC TV option and the GOR terminates at that time or 2) if ESPN doesn't decline the 2027 options, all existing schools must have a new landing spot to their satisfaction or else the conference stays intact in some fashion with the remaining schools.
Agree and that should have been acknowledged in my prior post. Point still stands that the ACC GOR language itself remains iron clad from what I've read but the administrative process to extend it with the ESPN opt out clause is being challenged in addition to challenging the amount of the exit fees (beyond GOR buyout).I thought FSU’s argument is that the TV deal that the GOR was based on changed after FSU signed it. The ESPN clause to get out of the contract was not included in the original that FSU was presented.
The BIG will handle it how Fox tells them too. And Fox will say “we want big games in that time slot. We own you. You play when we say you do.”Ah, there is the Nebraska we know. It will be interesting to see how the B1G handles this.
Same way Nebraska always gets handled. They get told to go sit in the corner, shut up and remember their place. Maybe if they were some what relevant the last decade they would have a larger voice but they couldn’t even handle the big ten westAh, there is the Nebraska we know. It will be interesting to see how the B1G handles this.
F NebbySame way Nebraska always gets handled. They get told to go sit in the corner, shut up and remember their place. Maybe if they were some what relevant the last decade they would have a larger voice but they couldn’t even handle the big ten west
This was also a huge issue that led to Warren leaving the conference. He didn’t disclose a lot of what was in the media deals before getting everyone to agree. It was only afterwards that the details started coming in.The BIG will handle it how Fox tells them too. And Fox will say “we want big games in that time slot. We own you. You play when we say you do.”
They also got embarrassed by Fatbert. LOFL.Also, the undertone here is (IMO) Nebraska is important enough to skip the Friday games, and the B1G should make the Purdues and Rutgers of the world host all of them. Which is also pretty sh***y and reminiscent of Texas/Oklahoma stuff in the Big 12.
This was also a huge issue that led to Warren leaving the conference. He didn’t disclose a lot of what was in the media deals before getting everyone to agree. It was only afterwards that the details started coming in.