Durante la bolsa de correo de Always College Football, Greg McElroy discute si los Florida State Seminoles realmente podrían dejar el ACC. ✔️Suscríbete a ESPN+ ✔️Obtén la aplicación de ESPN: ✔️Suscríbete a ESPN en YouTube: ✔️Suscríbete a NBA en ESPN en YouTube: ✔️Mira ESPN en YouTube TV:

En Camisetafutbols.com encontrarás las camisetas de los equipos de fútbol más importantes del mundo y de las selecciones nacionales más fuertes. Las elásticas de partido y entrenamiento de clubes como el Real Madrid, FC Barcelona, Atlético de Madrid, Bayern Munich, Manchester City, PSG o países como la selección española, alemana o inglesa las encontrarás En Camisetafutbols.com. Camisetas de fútbol baratas porque tenemos las mejores ofertas y descuentos para ti.

✅ Camiseta De Futbol Baratas Player vs Fan | camisetafutbols.com

🛒 Cómprala aquí: https://www.camisetafutbols.com/

📸 Siguenos en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/msy_es/

📲 WhatsApp: +86 166 5930 6369

👏 ¡Muchas gracias por ver el vídeo! 👏

🔴 LIKE & SUBSCRIBE 🔴

__

🏷️ TAGS:
CAMISETA Real Madrid 22/23
camisetafutbols
camisetafutbols.com
CAMISETAS FUTBOL SPAIN
CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL
CAMISETAS FUTBOL Baratas
CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL 2020
CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL 2021
CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL 2022
CAMISETAS FUTBOL EQUIPOS
CAMISETAS FUTBOL SELECCIONES
CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL BARATAS
MEJORES CAMISETAS DE FUTBOL
EQUIPACIONES FUTBOL
EQUIPACIONES DE FUTBOL

Otros sitios web de nuestra empresa para que los visite: camisetafutbols.com

41 comentarios en «¿Podría el estado de Florida realmente DEJAR el ACC? | Siempre fútbol universitario»
  1. FSU has a high opinion of itself. In Florida, they're well behind UF and Miami in popularity. They only really dominate in the panhandle (maybe). Before Bowden, they were considered 2nd rate. Now, they have to compete with UCF and USF too. I predict a steady decline for FSU.

  2. Greg McElroy is a college football analyst. He knows very little about whether FSU could do anything. As he stated, he is not a lawyer nor an AD. This is a segment that is simply for content. Useless

  3. The 120m is to leave the conference, they would then have to reaquire their media rights from the acc that number hasn't come out and the agreement isn't public. It's been described as ironclad. People are estimating somewhere in the 400m range but it could just be indefinite. The GoR will have to play out in court. Long story short Swafford should be drawn and quartered

  4. McElroy, you didn't even address the fact that the SEC also gets ESPN $$$. So, what's the difference to ESPN if you're showing FSU vs ACC teams or FSU vs SEC teams? If anything, ESPN benefits from more high profile matchups.

    The 2nd issue you should address is this whole unequal TV revenue distribution. How long before we hear Bama, Georgia and LSU demanding higher % revenue, arguing why should we subsidize Vanderbilt, Miss St and Arkansas' football programs? How long before we hear Michigan and Ohio St say, "we're not giving our hard earned $$ away to Northwestern and Indiana"?

    If "unequal TV revenue distribution" becomes an accepted Conference practice, wouldn't that be the final nail in the coffins of College Football, create mass chaos, lawsuits and possibly jeopardize all the college athletic programs of every school who is not really "TV worthy"?? Since CFB TV funds virtually all the Athletics of most FBS universities, if that TV$$ is now going to only 32 or 40 CFB schools, what happens to ALL THE OTHER SPORTS OF ALL THOSE "NON WORTHY" SCHOOLS???

    In the end, UNMITIGATED GREED WILL BE THE DEATHKNELL OF CFB. UNEQUAL REVENUE DISTRIBUTION AMONG SUPPOSEDLY EQUAL CONFERENCE MEMBERS IS ONE STEP CLOSER TO THE GRAVE.

  5. Hopefully the other schools will realize that even the B12 would give them more money than they're making. Some go to B12, some to B1G, some to SEC. In the BOT meeting at FSU (where this is coming from), what they talked about right after the media rights deal would be another thing they need to be concerned about getting the school more money. Not just best path to the playoff, more money for the school. They need to convince NCST/Louisville/VT/Pitt/Miami/Duke along with Clemson that they already mentioned and UNC/UVA (who are probably well aware too) that there's more money elsewhere. ACC with this FSU news is on an even steeper slope, at least if the other schools take action too.

  6. I’d have to say the writing is on the wall for the ACC. They aren’t even a good basketball conference. I would bet they are going to try to get the most they can for Clemson, FSU, and Miami. The rest will be worth nothing and top brass run to the bank laughing. You’re possibly looking at $500mil between the top 4-5 schools to leave and sign over GOR. It’s going to be a mess because it’ll take 4-5 years and in the mean time we are spending tons of money fighting it, we are losing in revenues, and I would bet the refs will be less than favorable towards FSU this season

  7. Maybe ACC is next big east football. 6 teams leave an go to acc so they can be big enough for 2 divisions an 1 champ game. Crazy how tv rights affect how much a college loses if they jump ship. Heck I'd like to see Nebraska Illinois west Virginia Boston college Vanderbilt go to the AAC an ressurect their programs. That would make total since to me. Florida st would do not good in sec no where near as good as Texas Oklahoma. Big 10 might compete Good. Though this season Florida st basketball awfull in a very overrated not good this season basketball conference.

  8. The SEC Conference is not a good conference compared to the Big 10 Conference, AAU Research. The Big 10 Conference offers more revenue, other than tv shares and all the SEC Conference offers is tv revenues. AAU Research, look it up.

  9. The formation of the super conferences may have unintended consequences for ESPN/Disney unless y'all restructure the TV deal with ACC. You are either gonna pay more to keep the ACC deal or pay more to the big ACC schools that end up joining the SEC… and lose some future programming to FOX from the schools joining the B1G.

    The dissolution of the ACC is possible IF, somehow, the PAC stays together AND schools like Pitt, Louisville, Virginia Tech (their rivals) can be convinced to join Cincinnati and West Virginia in the Big XII.

    FSU, Clemson, Miami, UNC, Duke, Virginia, VA Tech, Pitt, UL all have new homes lined up if they choose to leave. Seven teams are all that is required for dissolution.

  10. PAC to immediately add 6 (at least 3 are AAU) for the interim (which will give the PAC presense in every major market in the SW outside of L.A.), prior to B1G taking 7 current PAC members:

    Kansas(AAU), SMU (Dallas), Rice (AAU Houston), Tulane (AAU New Orleans), SDSU (San Diego), AND Air Force OR Houston OR New Mexico OR Hawaii OR Vanderbilt (AAU. if involuntarily booted from SEC, good travel partner for Tulane). -adding 3(4 if Vandy) more AAU schools for 10 (V11) total in the PAC.

    This will be announced and built with the media partners in a few weeks.

    Should the show not go on… (i.e. the B1G Pacific expansion), the future of the PAC will be very bright with these 16 Powerhouse Universities:

    Washington
    Washington State
    Oregon
    Oregon State
    California
    Stanford
    San Diego State
    Utah
    Colorado
    Kansas
    Arizona
    Arizona State
    Southern Methodist
    Rice
    Tulane

    AND

    Air Force OR Houston OR New Mexico OR Hawaii OR Vanderbilt.

    Good move, regardless of short term media numbers.

  11. The best path to the College Football Playoff for FSU is to stay in the ACC. If college sports is heading towards two leagues(that matter) it is going to be boring unless you're one of the schools at the very top.

  12. I am not a lawyer but I wonder what pledges or promises were made by the ACC in regards to maintaining parity with other conferences to induce member schools to sign the contract. Could the contract be challenged on the grounds that the ACC failed to deliver on their commitment to maintain parity?

  13. As explained here, I don't think FSU and Clemson can leave the ACC because GOR makes it too expensive. The other ACC schools have zero incentive to cooperate with them.
    If a legal challenge had a legit chance of being successful, I think FSU and Clemson would have already sued to get the process started.

  14. Well, he is sorta right. It is 120 million to leave the ACC. The Grant of Rights (GOR) is still owned by the ACC/ESPN. You cannot challenge the GOR and win or FSU would have been gone long ago. The only way at the moment is to use that snippet of information from FSU's BOT meeting to, hopefully, get the other schools (needing a total of 8) to consider leaving and disbanding the ACC. With that, there is no ACC GOR.

  15. FSU is leaving sooner or later. They wouldn't bring up these points in such a public forum without knowing they were eventually going to leave. Besides challenging the GOR in court, dissolving the ACC would also get them out of the GOR.

  16. Clemson brings in the cash. Simply review the bowl game and regular season television revenue associated with Clemson over the last 15 years. Wake Forrest, Georgia Tech and the like wouldn't be around in football or any of the non-revenue producing sports if the Tigers weren't carrying the load. Period.

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *