TheHall wrote:Michigan can get 100k people to watch "minor league" football against EMU & you don't think if the NCAA lost its anti-trust protection that no market would pop up to get those 100K butts in the stands.
marquette wrote:TheHall wrote:Michigan can get 100k people to watch "minor league" football against EMU & you don't think if the NCAA lost its anti-trust protection that no market would pop up to get those 100K butts in the stands.
I think the Ann Arbor Wolverines would draw around 10-14,000/game, similar to other minor league teams. You take the University of Michigan off the uniform and you lose the support of the alumni and the state as a whole. The NBDL gets 2-5,000/game. That's probably not the plateau for football, but I wouldn't put it anywhere near 100,000. I guarantee you there would be a massive dropoff in attendance, tv coverage, press coverage, and donations the day the team disassociated itself from the university. That name on the front of the jersey is worth way more than the one on the back. People simply would not drive in from hours away or fly in a plane across the country for a team representing Ann Arbor, especially not with Detroit right there.
TheHall wrote:If I played at UM & Desmond Howard or Charles Woodson or Tom Brady played for the Ann Arbor Wolverines I seriously disagree. And who do you think ESPN would be televising. My point is, there are no existing minor league sports that would bring the money like fb & bball period, so that 10-14,000 a game number is not a god barometer. The closest approximation is the NCAA version of fb & bbabll and that's why the NCAA has those two sports on lock.
TheHall wrote:I think you guys are under estimating the powers that really prop the NCAA's up. Seems like you can't picture a world without the anti-trust protected NCAA; EVERYTHING would be different. In Europe, sub-NBA ball is hugely supported & profitable. ESPN televises hs fball & bball regularly now not because there in no market for this level of competition, its exactly the opposite,
Also, most college grads support their schools because of & through the sports programs, not donations related to other departments. Also most college sports fans aren't necessarily graduates or even connected to the schools themselves. That's one reason why when a school sucks support wanes and vice versa. The billion dollar beast that is minor league bball & fb need a home true but it doesn't have to live in the NCAA structure. The NCAA structure just happens to be the most profitable (low cost labor). Don't get it twisted without the best ballers in the country going to these schools "college pride" would be more like high school pride, which is cool but doesn't create or support an ESPN. How many our your high school games do you think you will go to over the next 20 years? Would we really be posting in this forum if the best players in the country/world for their ages, weren't playing in college.
TheHall wrote:I think you guys are under estimating the powers that really prop the NCAA's up. Seems like you can't picture a world without the anti-trust protected NCAA; EVERYTHING would be different. In Europe, sub-NBA ball is hugely supported & profitable. ESPN televises hs fball & bball regularly now not because there in no market for this level of competition, its exactly the opposite,
Also, most college grads support their schools because of & through the sports programs, not donations related to other departments. Also most college sports fans aren't necessarily graduates or even connected to the schools themselves. That's one reason why when a school sucks support wanes and vice versa. The billion dollar beast that is minor league bball & fb need a home true but it doesn't have to live in the NCAA structure. The NCAA structure just happens to be the most profitable (low cost labor). Don't get it twisted without the best ballers in the country going to these schools "college pride" would be more like high school pride, which is cool but doesn't create or support an ESPN. How many our your high school games do you think you will go to over the next 20 years? Would we really be posting in this forum if the best players in the country/world for their ages, weren't playing in college.
jayball wrote:TheHall wrote:I think you guys are under estimating the powers that really prop the NCAA's up. Seems like you can't picture a world without the anti-trust protected NCAA; EVERYTHING would be different. In Europe, sub-NBA ball is hugely supported & profitable. ESPN televises hs fball & bball regularly now not because there in no market for this level of competition, its exactly the opposite,
Also, most college grads support their schools because of & through the sports programs, not donations related to other departments. Also most college sports fans aren't necessarily graduates or even connected to the schools themselves. That's one reason why when a school sucks support wanes and vice versa. The billion dollar beast that is minor league bball & fb need a home true but it doesn't have to live in the NCAA structure. The NCAA structure just happens to be the most profitable (low cost labor). Don't get it twisted without the best ballers in the country going to these schools "college pride" would be more like high school pride, which is cool but doesn't create or support an ESPN. How many our your high school games do you think you will go to over the next 20 years? Would we really be posting in this forum if the best players in the country/world for their ages, weren't playing in college.
I disagree wholeheartedly. People have emotional and family connections to universities that will not be easily replaced by whatever minor league system you have in mind. The nostalgia, tradition, and a whole lot of other stuff make college sports popular and not easily replaced.
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