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|    Message 207,847 of 209,580    |
|    Eric Ramon to The NOTBCS Guy    |
|    Re: Time of death: 5:15pm, August 4, 202    |
|    05 Aug 23 12:27:54    |
      From: ramon.eric@gmail.com              On Saturday, August 5, 2023 at 12:14:10 PM UTC-7, The NOTBCS Guy wrote:       > > > Now, real chance (at least IMODO) that at least one of the remaining       four        > > > schools drops it's athletic program completely.        >        > > There is zero chance that happens. They may drop to a lower level but will        > > not completely eliminate.       > "Drop to a lower level?" He's not talking about just football; he's talking       about all sports. No way any of these schools ends up in Division II, much       less get rid of all of their sports, or change them all to "club level,"       whatever that means.        > Cal and Stanford are far too entrenched in the "minor sports" to drop them.       Cut a few, maybe - back in 2010, Cal tried cutting its baseball, women's       lacrosse, and men's and women's gymnastics programs (all four of which       currently exist) - but certainly        not the one thing that still brings in money; men's basketball.        >        > There's a slim change Oregon State or Washington State could drop their       football program, and a slightly less slim chance one or more of the four       drops down to FCS and joins the Big West.        >        > Men's basketball...pardon me while I look something up...        > Normally, when a school leaves a conference, any shares of the Basketball TV       money that it earned remain with the conference. However, according to the       NCAA Bylaws, once a multisport (as opposed to something like the CCHA)       conference drops below 7        schools, it has 2 years to get back to 7, or its remaining shares go to the       teams' new conferences.        > Assuming none of these four teams gets into the NCAA tournament in the next       few years (and the last time any of them did was when Cal and Oregon State got       in in 2016, although I think Cal was one of the "first four out" in 2017),       that's about $10.9        million in 2025 and $9.25 million in 2026.        >        > Also, the NCAA is probably sweating about whether Cal and Stanford can keep       up their mens' gymnastics programs, as there are already so few schools that       support it that any defections could mean the NCAA no longer conductiong a       championship for it.              there is NO chance Oregon State drops football. Jonathan Smith has a contract       that runs until 2029. They have to pay him somehow and football is the best       way to raise that money. I think they end up in the Mountain West.       Additionally, with Oregon State,        the Beavers are a national power in baseball. If any school does drop sports       it won't be Oregon State              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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