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UPDATED -- Men's ACC Standings as of 1-19

Standings as of Saturday Night 1-19

1. Virginia 4 - 1 16 - 1 L 1
2. Virginia Tech 4 - 1 15 - 2 W 1
3. Duke 4 - 1 14 - 2 W 1
4. North Carolina 4 - 1 14 - 4 W 2
5. Louisville 4 - 1 13 - 5 W 3
6. Syracuse 4 - 1 13 - 5 W 2

7. NC State 3 - 2 15 - 3 W 1

8. Pitt 2 - 3 12 - 6 L 1
9. Georgia Tech 2 - 3 10 - 8 L 2

10. Florida State 1 - 3 13 - 4 L 2
11. Clemson 1 - 3 11 - 4 W 1

12. Notre Dame 1 - 4 11 - 7 L 2
13. Miami 1 - 4 9 - 8 L 1
14. Wake Forest 1 - 4 8 - 9 L 1

15. Boston College 0 - 4 9 - 7 L 5



http://theacc.com/standings.aspx?path=mbball

WBB romps past UVA 91-43

Two spectacular quarters for Louisville WBB in the 48-point romp. 31-9 in the second and 25-10 in the third as Walz's Cards go to 16-1 on the season. For bumps, bloody mouths, missed opportunities and a blessed lack-of whistles, let's drive the lane and get some easy paint points in:

FIVE THINGS ABOUT THIS GAME

5) Paint proficiency.
The Cards dominated inside, despite the presence of 6'9" UVA player Felicia Aiyeotan, out-scoring UVA 44-24 in the paint and out-rebounding them 42-27. Add in a few missed layups and put-backs and this could have been 60-24 in the paint. Dunham and Shook combined for 26 points and 13 rebounds. Dana Evans should have been arrested for theft at the end of the contest because of so many breakaway layups. 57.1% shooting for UofL 50% from three range.

4) That's gonna hurt this morning. Sam Fuehring took a fully-intended elbow to the face with seven minutes left in the game and the refs agreed with an intentional foul called on Wahoo forward Mone Jones. No need to lower that elbow into Sam's grille after the shot. Sure, frustrations can escalate if you're down 40, but the head shot was uncalled for. Paulie spoke with Sam after the game and she indicated that it was hurting more than it did when it happened. Having braces doesn't help. Poor sportsmanship. Poor Sam. No teeth dislodged though.

3) Bobble-blitz. A crazy scene evolved when the KFC YUM! doors opened and fans were running frantically to the bobblehead giveaway staging area. Only 1000 or so were distributed to fans with tickets. Former mayor Jerry Abramson was given one and promptly left it on the press row table next to Paulie after the game. He did return to claim it after a few minutes. This is why more of us can't have nice things. Dollar cost/amount the probable reason why so few were available. Coach Walz wore the same outfit last night as the bobblehead did. Class.

2) Not scared. UVA's 6'9" Aiyeton may stand 6'9" but she was not an intimidation factor to Asia and the Cards. Maybe because she only saw 14 minutes, had only four points, no blocks and five rebounds. In fact, Kylee Shook blocked one of Felicia's shots. "You can't go out on the court intimidated." was Durr's sage advice. She also advised that you did have to be careful on how you attacked her. Dana Evans added that you "just get her in the air and then drive on her." Durr and Evans combined for 34 points on 13-18 shooting, 6-11 from the deep. No fear from the refereeing crew in laying off the whistles and letting them play, just 28 fouls called and a total of just 13 free throw attempts combined for the squads.

1) Keep him on the bench. Jeff Walz finally launched a "three" after receiving an errant pass at the end of the third quarter. Almost an air ball from the sidelines, barely getting rim. Walz didn't get "T'd" up and commented that he didn't want to receive any more passes to him during action. Durr's comment of "we don't need him hitting that shot" drew a few laughs. Coach explained that he spent two years on the bench at NKU in college and practiced shots during pre-game warmups from there because he knew that's where his game position would be. Get the ball inside, Jeff. Get the assist next time.


-- Sonja --

If I Had to Guess on the WR Coach

My money right now is on Gunter Brewer. He's got a tremendous track record in college and is very familiar with the ACC. Coached Randy Moss at Marshall, Justin Blackmon and Dez Bryant at Oklahoma State, was recruiting coordinator from 2012-17 at UNC where recruiting really wasn't the issue for UNC. For a staff that actually skews pretty young, I would like the hire.

Michigan State Interim President Resigns

John Engler will resign as interim president of Michigan State University, multiple sources told the Free Press on Wednesday.

The move comes hours after the board set a special meeting for early Thursday morning with the intent to fire him, the sources said.

Engler has been under heavy criticism for the past year, since he took over for Lou Anna Simon, who herself resigned under heavy criticism for her handling of the Larry Nassar sexual assaults scandal.

Members of the Michigan State Board of Trustees were scheduled to discuss Engler's future at the school Thursday morning after he said in an interview last week that some of Nassar's victims are "enjoying the spotlight."

Engler's comments Friday in an interview with the Detroit News editorial board drew immediate criticism from survivors and others. He was discussing a program called the Healing Assistance Fund, which will focus on helping victims who weren't part of the $500 million settlement, according to the News.

FB RECRUITING: 3-star CB Keeyon Stewart intrigued by UofL offer with family close by, sets OV

With Louisville's coaches out on the road these past couple days, several new offers have been extended but one that is especially interesting was handed out on Tuesday to 3-star cornerback Keeyon Stewart.

While Louisville's coaches had to travel to Houston, TX where Stewart currently lives for the visit, the North Shore product spent some time early in his life in in Madisonville, Kentucky.

"[I have] aunties, uncles, and cousins there that I’ve seen once in the 17 years I've been living since I left Kentucky" Stewart stated. "It’s a great school. It’s also a chance for my whole family that didn’t see me play in Houston, play in Kentucky. I've got an opportunity to go back now."

With schools such as TCU, Texas Tech, Washington, Utah, and Houston trying to win over his commitment, Stewart does have his mind made up on one factor that could very likely help Louisville's chances.

"I’m not staying in Houston. I want to get away. Mom wants me to get away too."

With defensive backs being one of the positions Louisville is prioritizing with limited available scholarships, Keeyon Stewart is one of the top targets on Louisville's recruiting board and will officially visit Louisville next weekend.

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ACC Revenue vs Other P5's. ACC Data Goes Back 10 Years.

Great article on ACC Revenues. Compares ACC to the other P5 Conferences. Goes back 10 years. Also breaks down sources of ACC Distributed Revenue:

ACC revenues over the past 10 years (in millions)

Years Total TV Bowl NCAA tournament Avg. share
2007-2008 $162.8 $75.3 $29.2 $15.1 $11.8
2008-2009 $172.7 $76.9 $30.7 $15.9 $13.6
2009-2010 $158.2 $77.6 $31.6 $18.2 $11.7
2010-2011 $167.2 $79.3 $36.7 $18.2 $12.3
2011-2012 $223.6 $130.5 $43.8 $17.7 $16.9
2012-2013 $232.4 $146.6 $36.7 $18.2 $17.6
2013-2014 $302.3 $197.2 $48.8 $17.5 $19.3*
2014-2015 $403.1 $217.9 $94.2 $18.4 $26.2*
2015-2016 $337.4 $226.1 $85.8 $20.6 $23.8*
2016-2017 $418.1 $236.0 $113.2 $24.2 $26.6*
* Average full share. Partial ACC member Notre Dame received $4.9 million in its first year in the league, $6.2 million in its second, $4.3 million in its third, $5.8 million in its fourth.

"The ACC’s average distribution to its 14 full-time members of $26.6 million was last among the Power Five.

With only 10 schools, the Big 12’s average distribution was $34.3 million, the latter figure from USA Today’s Steve Berkowitz. Mean per-school shares for the other Power Fives, according to USA Today, were: Southeastern Conference $40.9 million, Big Ten $37 million and Pacific 12 $30.9 million."

Whole Article:
https://www.dailypress.com/sports/dp-spt-acc-revenue-0526-story.html
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More Insight on ACC Financial Challenges vs Other P5

More insight on the ACC's financial challenges. An article from June 2018.
David Teel Contact Reporter Daily Press

Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel told the university’s Board of Regents last week that his department’s share of Big Ten revenue was $51.1 million in 2017-18, with $52.1 million projected in 2018-19.

Per its most recent federal tax filing, the ACC’s average distribution to schools in 2016-17 was $26.6 million, little more than half the Big Ten’s haul. Two points about the striking contrast:

First, neither the ACC nor its member schools have revealed the league’s 2017-18 shares. Moreover, no one has projected 2018-19 numbers.

Second, sports isn’t Monopoly. A more modest pile of cash — none of the Power Five conferences is impoverished — hasn’t prevented ACC teams from thriving nationally in football, men’s basketball and the Olympic sports.

Manuel’s presentation to Michigan’s board, plus the Southeastern Conference’s average distribution of $40.9 million in 2016-17, reaffirms the ACC’s need for its impending cable channel to generate considerable revenue.

A partnership with ESPN, the ACC Network is scheduled to launch in August 2019, its earnings potential the subject of rampant speculation and, among athletic directors, anticipation.

The ADs wonder because they’re investing millions in on-campus network production facilities. They worry because sustaining a business long-term with a fraction of competitors’ resources borders on impossible.

The revenue gap has never been larger and likely will grow until the ACC Network debuts. The overarching question is: How much can the channel bridge the gulf?

Disney’s October carriage agreement with Altice, a cable provider that serves New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, was an encouraging start. Disney is ESPN’s parent company, and the Altice deal includes not only ESPN but also the ACC and SEC networks.

Negotiations with cable providers elsewhere, and how many subscribers those providers retain in our cord-cutting world, will help determine the ACC Network’s success. Forecasting those contracts and subscription rates is folly, but there is one history lesson worth examining.

Many consider the SEC Network, born in 2014, the most successful launch in cable television annals. In its final fiscal year without the network, the conference reported $210.4 million in television and radio revenue. One year later, the SEC earned $311.8 million from TV-radio, a 48.2-percent increase.

The league’s most recent tax filing, for 2016-17, showed $409.1 million, a 94.4-percent bump over the network’s three years.

During that same time, ACC television money has risen 19.7 percent, from $197.2 million to $236 million.

Translation: In 2013-14, ACC television money lagged behind the SEC by a modest $13.2 million. Three years later, the difference was a staggering $173.1 million.

Since the SEC also has a lucrative contract with CBS, its increases can’t be solely attributed to the SEC Network. But there’s no questioning the network’s impact.

Comparable numbers for the Big Ten and its network are unavailable because, unlike the ACC and SEC, the conference does not reveal television revenue on its tax return. Rather, the Big Ten’s return categorizes more than 90 percent of its income as “sports revenue.”

Matching the SEC’s meteoric rise will be difficult, if only because ACC fans, smaller in number than at larger SEC schools, aren’t likely to create similar demand. That said, the ACC’s footprint stretches from Boston to Miami, and west to Pittsburgh, Louisville and Notre Dame.

SEC TV-radio revenue rose $101.4 million in the first year of its cable network, which calculates to $7.2 million for each of the conference’s 14 schools. The same increase divided among the ACC’s 15 schools would be $6.8 million.

Yes, partial ACC member Notre Dame will receive a full network share, as the Fighting Irish should. Their men’s basketball and Olympic programs, plus their five annual football games against ACC colleagues, are that valuable.

Some may recall that in February 2017 Florida State athletic director Stan Wilcox told the school’s Board of Trustees that the ACC Network could net each school $8 million-$10 million in Year 1, and $10 million-$15 million per year thereafter.

“These are all projections,” Wilcox told the board, according to 247sports.com. “It all depends on how well the network does. They are saying this network should have the same kind of return that the SEC Network has had in (its) first couple of years.”

Optimistic doesn’t begin to describe, and no one associated with the ACC Network project has echoed Wilcox, publicly or privately.

Firm answers? They won’t emerge until the conference’s 2019-20 tax return is released in the spring of 2021 — three years from now.

Until then, some tangible and encouraging comparisons for the ACC from the last five seasons.

NCAA men’s basketball tournament record: ACC 65-35, SEC 40-24, Big Ten 47-31.

Men’s basketball national championships: ACC 2, SEC 0, Big Ten 0.

Football bowl record: SEC 34-23, Big Ten 23-23, ACC 26-28.

Record in Bowl Championship Series, College Football Playoff and New Year’s Six games: ACC 7-5, Big Ten 8-6, SEC 8-9.

Football national championships: SEC 2, ACC 2, Big Ten 1.

Top 25 teams in this year’s penultimate Directors’ Cup all-sports standings: SEC 7, ACC 6, Big Ten 5.

An excellent place to be competitively versus the Power Five’s leading money-makers. The ACC’s challenge remains financial.



Complete Article:
https://www.dailypress.com/sports/dp-spt-acc-network-revenue-0628-story.html
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