dmac80 wrote:QueRico wrote:On another thread the question of which is "the conference" came up. The most important aspect being the existing automatic NCAA Tournament bid.
A poster seemed certain that the football schools are entitled to the bid in the eyes of the NCAA. Therefore the New Big East would have to apply for an additional automatic bid, bringing the total to 32 if approved. Both factions will meet the 2011-revised NCAA requirements (7 schools offering @ least 6 men's & 6 women's sports, including both M & W basketball). Does anyone foresee an issue w/ the NCAA getting this taken care of w/in one season to insure both leagues getting auto-bids regardless of who is "the new conference"? Of course I'm biased & believe that the bid should go along w/ the league name, history & records.
This is actually really important and deserves its own thread. It is absolutely crucial that the new Big East (C7) gets an auto bid, and hopefully one next year. To be taken seriously they need an auto bid. How likely/unlikely is that to happen? The media hasn't really mentioned it at all.
dmac80 wrote:from a legal standpoint I'm not sure I fully understand the concept of owning, buying, selling, transfering "history", but I imagine it means if the schools of the C7 keep the history then they can market, talk about, sell products, show media content etc based on that history, whereas the other schools cannot? Am I even headed in the right direction?
Anyway I would assume the FB schools keep their football specific history as what good does UCONN's football history do for the C7?
Also, what impact does the basketball history going with the C7 have on UCONN exactly?
SixTwentySix wrote:The history of "Big East Football" is just that... history. It's over, it's no more, it doesn't exist. It stays with the name the Big East and will always be a part of the Big East. Why would the Football schools take the Big East Football history with them into a brand new named conference, that makes no sense. UConn football will have it's history viewed the same exact way that Cuse's football will have theirs viewed when they're in the ACC.
Schools and conferences don't 'own' history, it's not a matter of who gets it, it can't be possessed as if it was something tangible. What the name brings is the right to continue the history and have it still be relevant to the programs involved.
The history of Big East Football stays with the Big East name... how could it possibly go anywhere else?
dmac80 wrote:from a legal standpoint I'm not sure I fully understand the concept of owning, buying, selling, transfering "history", but I imagine it means if the schools of the C7 keep the history then they can market, talk about, sell products, show media content etc based on that history, whereas the other schools cannot? Am I even headed in the right direction?
Anyway I would assume the FB schools keep their football specific history as what good does UCONN's football history do for the C7?
Also, what impact does the basketball history going with the C7 have on UCONN exactly?
BillEsq wrote:SixTwentySix wrote:The history of "Big East Football" is just that... history. It's over, it's no more, it doesn't exist. It stays with the name the Big East and will always be a part of the Big East. Why would the Football schools take the Big East Football history with them into a brand new named conference, that makes no sense. UConn football will have it's history viewed the same exact way that Cuse's football will have theirs viewed when they're in the ACC.
Schools and conferences don't 'own' history, it's not a matter of who gets it, it can't be possessed as if it was something tangible. What the name brings is the right to continue the history and have it still be relevant to the programs involved.
The history of Big East Football stays with the Big East name... how could it possibly go anywhere else?
history is tangible you can sell images and media rights. People buy and sell history all of the time. Classic example Cleveland Browns
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