That’s another good point.At least this way we can say, why go to Penn State (or wherever) and pay a state income tax on your merchandise royalties. Come to UM where there is no state tax.
Anything that ends the bag game is good with me. I always thought it was BS that teams sold jerseys of players and the players didn't get a cut. Then they "fix" it by simply not allowing them to be sold. A better idea is to sell the merch and let the players have a cut. Some kids flame out and never make it in the pros, so this income could really make a difference in their lives.
You don't find it at all interesting that important Miami games blow out the ratings for ESPN, etc.? Why would you limit the conversation to "typical ACC matchups?" The reason an ND @ Miami game hits historic ratings is because people everywhere are more attracted to Miami and whatever the **** we do than the University of Florida. I'd guess most people with half a branding brain can turn that into merchandise with a broader reach than for a football team linked to the city of Gainesville.The other market is the fan base, which we all know is relatively small at Miami. Miami is in a larger market, but do our ratings for a typical acc matchup beat UFs?
Not at all. The comments are realistic. I mention an average ACC game because that is what the vast majority of games will be. Therefore, advertisers will will pay based on those numbers. Advertisers aren’t paying a kid to wear their gear based on ratings numbers that happen every couple years.You don't find it at all interesting that important Miami games blow out the ratings for ESPN, etc.? Why would you limit the conversation to "typical ACC matchups?" The reason an ND @ Miami game hits historic ratings is because people everywhere are more attracted to Miami and whatever the **** we do than the University of Florida. I'd guess most people with half a branding brain can turn that into merchandise with a broader reach than for a football team linked to the city of Gainesville.
I've interpreted your comments to fall in line with the small ball approach our athletic department and previous head football coaches have operated under. Play up Miami. Play up our brand. We have inherent advantages that far outweigh boosters and the population of a private school.
Fair points, man. The issue I see with statements like "advertisers aren't paying a kid to wear their gear based on ratings numbers" is that it misses why I even mentioned ratings: Miami is a different place with a different type of stage when we're good. That's pretty enticing to a kid who thinks he can cash in on that limelight. It's all conjecture and we'd have to really dig on the specific numbers to project any kind of $ benefit. I think this could work to our benefit by simply being in a bigger market.Not at all. The comments are realistic. I mention an average ACC game because that is what the vast majority of games will be. Therefore, advertisers will will pay based on those numbers. Advertisers aren’t paying a kid to wear their gear based on ratings numbers that happen every couple years.
At the end of the day tho, I think the ratings between Florida schools would average out to be pretty similar. Therefore, kids contracts would likely be similar. Also, a large national brand will pay a kid to be a walking billboard regardless of whether he chooses um, FSU or OSU.
So how can a school offer a player a nicer pot? The player gets paid to endorse local businesses, and sells merchandise. That’s where the fan base and boosters come in.
So we r fuqed regardless still.....guess the middle of the pack will always be TNMMiami doesn’t have the booster money or alumni base to compete with the elites or large state schools. If there’s going to be legal bidding wars, we will have a tough time competing.
Dammit DW.... wait at least until our D gives up a field goal next season to go full negative.So we r fuqed regardless still.....guess the middle of the pack will always be TNM
Maybe we could compare SEC vs ACC tv revenue to get an idea.., but I really think in terms of national advertising, Miami is in the same boat as the teams we recruit against. The differences probably even out in the end.Fair points, man. The issue I see with statements like "advertisers aren't paying a kid to wear their gear based on ratings numbers" is that it misses why I even mentioned ratings: Miami is a different place with a different type of stage when we're good. That's pretty enticing to a kid who thinks he can cash in on that limelight. It's all conjecture and we'd have to really dig on the specific numbers to project any kind of $ benefit. I think this could work to our benefit by simply being in a bigger market.
Miami does have a premier brand though, it's just been hidden behind a losing program recently. When we win were absolutely on the level of those programs, just look at the 2017 season before we crashed at the end.
We might not have the #students/alums or the 100K attendance, but Miami is a national brand and you can "further your brand" at Miami just as well as you can at most blueblood schools
Aren't those numbers skewed based on ESPN's now supposed bad, overestimated bet on the SEC contract?Maybe we could compare SEC vs ACC tv revenue to get an idea.., but I really think in terms of national advertising, Miami is in the same boat as the teams we recruit against. The differences probably even out in the end.
ESPN is losing their shirt, but assuming they used the same math and multipliers to decide what sec vs acc payouts are, then I’d suspect we could still get an idea of total eyeballs watching sec vs acc games.Aren't those numbers skewed based on ESPN's now supposed bad, overestimated bet on the SEC contract?
Yeah, that's true, but the guy introducing the bill says he's open to putting restrictions.
I'd assume if it passes (obviously unlikely) it will be amended some way to allow for athletes to take corporate/adverising profits, but not straight up booster/fanbase money
True. It seems like they made some really poor market assumptions for those [mostly] college towns.ESPN is losing their shirt, but assuming they used the same math and multipliers to decide what sec vs acc payouts are, then I’d suspect we could still get an idea of total eyeballs watching sec vs acc games.