ScriptOhio;2267705; said:
Isn't the reason that the B1G is going from 12 teams to 14 teams is that each team's piece of the pie (i.e. annual share of the conference's TV revenue) will be significantly larger?
Just sayin': If each B1G team gets $35M and each PAC12 team gets $20M annually from TV revenue there is a competitive imbalance on what the school's athletic department can afford to do (unless the difference is made up elsewhere).
I think the issue at hand is that the B1G already has its own all-sports cable network in place, and it has been successful for five years. After that, the untapped markets to the east, west and south are demographic goldmines that add eyeballs (and alum of existing B1G schools) at figures that have the effect of more than doubling the subscriber % with the addition of just two schools.
Four new potential markets in NY, Phily, Baltimore, and DC are 12% of all TVs.
The four exising largest markets in Chicago, Detroit, Indi, and Cleveland are only 7.5% by comparison.
The Top 10 TV markets represent 30% of TV households. This is a play to lock-up 3 of the top 4, and 5 of the top 11 (Detroit is #11). In essence, > 1/3 of the entire US.
The Penn State scandal has the potential to seriously damage marketability in the east, so Rutgers and Maryland being fast tracked may have been done to absorb that too should PSU become non-competitive over the coming decade.
The PAC-12, on the other hand, already owns everything from Seattle to LA, and east to Boulder and Tucson, so there isn't anywhere for them to expand that doesn't make the slices of the pie smaller for everybody else, aside from one place they can go: Texas.