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I saw a report from Mandel (who’s a **** reporter but has PAC 12 sources) that at least 2 P12 schools are against any expansion.I didn’t see this posted yesterday but it seems like they wouldn’t be adding schools if this plays out.
I saw a report from Mandel (who’s a **** reporter but has PAC 12 sources) that at least 2 P12 schools are against any expansion.
I’m assuming that’s Oregon and Washington, which, if that is the case, means there definitely won’t be any expansion for the foreseeable future. Those two are key to the league surviving, so the other schools really can’t afford to overrule them on schools like SDSU and SMU
Maybe they can go to 8 games and do an annual game with the ACC to get more money from TV.
Yep, my thoughts exactly. Oregon and Washington are hoping that if/when they get an invite to the B1G and if a GOR exists, the conference is smaller, they and a few select others who leave for other power conferences will just vote to dissolve the Pac 12. This is what ESPN/American tried to do a few years ago after the OU/T exit to get them to the SEC sooner and cheaper. Dumb move by ESPN thinking Big 12 teams would just freely join the American. Now if they tried to funnel those team's to the ACC, it may have actually worked.Sounds familiar. OuT was against expansion as well. Tougher to get the conference to fold and avoid the penalties with a bigger league. At 10 teams, it only takes them to leave + the 4 corners and you are getting close to being able to dissolve a league even if you are tied to a GOR.
The way publicly available GORs are structured, if you have an invite to another conference, you don’t get a vote on the issue of dissolving the conference. If a school doesn’t have an agreement in writing from their new conference, they don’t vote to dissolve the conference. There’s no reason to believe a GOR written by competent lawyers for the purpose of keeping a conference together would be structured any differently. Lying about having a conflict of interest sets up the offending institution for a slam-dunk case for damages to every school in a worse off position. With most schools being public, this would be very easy to prove due to public record laws.Yep, my thoughts exactly. Oregon and Washington are hoping that if/when they get an invite to the B1G and if a GOR exists, the conference is smaller, they and a few select others who leave for other power conferences will just vote to dissolve the Pac 12. This is what ESPN/American tried to do a few years ago after the OU/T exit to get them to the SEC sooner and cheaper. Dumb move by ESPN thinking Big 12 teams would just freely join the American. Now if they tried to funnel those team's to the ACC, it may have actually worked.
I think it has more to do with them (if it is UW and UO) worried about diluting the media payouts with two additional schools moreso than dissolving the GOR. If the new P12 contract is just a 5-6 year GOR, they could probably easily buy out the last year or two if a B10 invite materializes.The way publicly available GORs are structured, if you have an invite to another conference, you don’t get a vote on the issue of dissolving the conference. If a school doesn’t have an agreement in writing from their new conference, they don’t vote to dissolve the conference. There’s no reason to believe a GOR written by competent lawyers for the purpose of keeping a conference together would be structured any differently. Lying about having a conflict of interest sets up the offending institution for a slam-dunk case for damages to every school in a worse off position. With most schools being public, this would be very easy to prove due to public record laws.
If everyone has a better landing spot lined up, dissolving the conference might be in the table. Otherwise, it’s not a realistic plan.
Not sure the logic of playing more non-con games. Sure it could create more inventory for TV partners. But if the inventory is of quality (another P5 game) that a Pac10 media partner would want, there's a 50/50 chance it would be a road game.I didn’t see this posted yesterday but it seems like they wouldn’t be adding schools if this plays out.
This. I just don’t see SDSU or SMU being additive to the PAC in the $25M per year plus range.I think it has more to do with them (if it is UW and UO) worried about diluting the media payouts with two additional schools moreso than dissolving the GOR. If the new P12 contract is just a 5-6 year GOR, they could probably easily buy out the last year or two if a B10 invite materializes.
Money is more important than conference stability to WAOR at this juncture
I think the loophole in your argument is conferences don't invite new members. New members apply to join the new conference.The way publicly available GORs are structured, if you have an invite to another conference, you don’t get a vote on the issue of dissolving the conference. If a school doesn’t have an agreement in writing from their new conference, they don’t vote to dissolve the conference. There’s no reason to believe a GOR written by competent lawyers for the purpose of keeping a conference together would be structured any differently. Lying about having a conflict of interest sets up the offending institution for a slam-dunk case for damages to every school in a worse off position. With most schools being public, this would be very easy to prove due to public record laws.
If everyone has a better landing spot lined up, dissolving the conference might be in the table. Otherwise, it’s not a realistic plan.
If that’s the case, you don’t understand legal matters very well, then. There’s discussions, agreements, and signed deals. There’s a difference between each. Don’t treat them all as the same.I think the loophole in your argument is conferences don't invite new members. New members apply to join the new conference.
It's been reported that CU, OR and WA have met with Big12 or Big10 and yet they are still voting members of Pac10. So I feel there is a legal grey area that schools know how to navigate.
All the other noise aside, 9 is a great number for a conference. The ACC was at 9 members before they invited the Big East teams. 9 means they can play a round robin football and basketball schedule with 4 home and 4 away in football and 8 home and 8 away in basketball with room to play a good OOC team or two in football.Only reason an 8 game schedule makes sense is if Colorado leaves and they stay at 9 teams. Which, maybe this is laying the groundwork for?
Was OU, UT, USC, UCLA leaving common knowledge by their conferences before it was released by the media?If that’s the case, you don’t understand legal matters very well, then. There’s discussions, agreements, and signed deals. There’s a difference between each. Don’t treat them all as the same.
The PAC schools are essentially free agents as of 7/1/24 at this point. There’s no need to dissolve the conference as they wouldn’t make a move before then. That changes if they re-up for another 5 years and then try to dissolve the conference in 2-3 years.
Texas and OU still had voting rights on some league issues after announcing they were leaving. Other issues, they no longer had voting rights. For example, they didn’t get a vote on adding new members or the new media deal. If there was a vote to dissolve, they would not have gotten a vote.
Something like this would take 6 schools, 2 conferences and 2-3 networks. No way that gets done on a wink and a handshake without it getting out either before, during, or after when all the schools that got screwed sue all the schools that went somewhere better.
Not sure the logic of playing more non-con games. Sure it could create more inventory for TV partners. But if the inventory is of quality (another P5 game)
Was OU, UT, USC, UCLA leaving common knowledge by their conferences before it was released by the media?
Those schools were all voting on all conference matters until their leaving went public.
So if there is a vote to dissolve the Pac10 or ACC, I'm confident every school will have a vote. Like I said, they know how to navigate around conference bylaws.
You keep simplifying it into all or none, and pretending like gigantic side deals are done on a handshake.Was OU, UT, USC, UCLA leaving common knowledge by their conferences before it was released by the media?
Those schools were all voting on all conference matters until their leaving went public.
So if there is a vote to dissolve the Pac10 or ACC, I'm confident every school will have a vote. Like I said, they know how to navigate around conference bylaws.
For most of the conferences, the conference games are more valuable. So adding conference games to a season is done to add value/money to a media deal.All the other noise aside, 9 is a great number for a conference. The ACC was at 9 members before they invited the Big East teams. 9 means they can play a round robin football and basketball schedule with 4 home and 4 away in football and 8 home and 8 away in basketball with room to play a good OOC team or two in football.
No, the conferences didn’t know they were leaving. I think OUTs plan was to do was USCLA and wait until about two years before the current media deal ended.
You continue to focus on a written agreements to join a new conference being up front. Go back and look at the process for OuT to join SEC. They didn't request to join and SEC didn't formally agree to accept OuT for many, many months after July 2021 when it initially broke in the media.You keep simplifying it into all or none, and pretending like gigantic side deals are done on a handshake.
SDSU is a prime example of why schools don’t start leaving (or dissolving) their current conference until they have the agreements in place to join their new conference.
Texas and OU had some voting rights up until then end for matters that involved them. Dissolving the league would no longer involve them, since they were leaving.
The same would be true for any school that voted to dissolve the PAC (or ACC) if they had a deal to leave for another conference. That conflict would begin to exist when they entered the agreement to join the new conference, not when it became public knowledge. Their vote would be voided retroactively to the date the conflict of interest came into existence. Suddenly, the PAC’s a zombie a you’ve got 6 schools whose participation in their new conference’s media deal is legally void, and the deal they had in the PAC is legally valid once again. That’s, ah, not a great situation.
Throw in some fraud for the administrators for knowingly voting when they knew they had a conflict of interest. Or perjury if there were lawsuits and they lied to cover it up. Nobody’s going to those lengths to cover up a conference move, it’s career suicide and putting themselves personally in legal peril.
If there was a vote on a matter that was effected by them leaving right before they announced their departure, the other voting members could call to void the previous vote and hold a new vote.Was OU, UT, USC, UCLA leaving common knowledge by their conferences before it was released by the media?
Those schools were all voting on all conference matters until their leaving went public.
So if there is a vote to dissolve the Pac10 or ACC, I'm confident every school will have a vote. Like I said, they know how to navigate around conference bylaws.