I tend to agree with this assessment. The first weekend is all about upsets and over time if it goes chalk from 64 to 16 viewership is going to suffer for 1/3 of the tournament.Agree with all of that, hence by rationale for bringing in up the big spenders/casual fans in others sports.
And I think it will still garner strong attention for the next 4/5 years.
But college football and pro sports both have the market for the iterations of championship matchups.
We can’t know, but what separated college basketball—and made people watch the opening two rounds—was whether “your” team survived against the double digit seed.
If the little guys can no longer be a threat anymore, I’m betting the overall viewership fades. At least until the final four.
Agree. A UNC-UCLA Final Four game will always out draw a Butler or a George Mason.I’m pretty sure the big named power schools always outdraw the Cinderella story. In fact, I think it also drops when you have a bunch of small schools making epic runs. Great for diehard fans and those programs obviously, but not nationally. I don’t have stats to back that up, but it’s been written about many times over the years. Stands to reason they have the largest fan bases and brand recognition, no? Those people aren’t going to stop following.
I guess it’s more about the smaller programs viewership or fatigue by it, but no way of knowing what % that is or if it even matters to anyone.
Like the old fart with the new corvette & trophy wife.
Sure but there will be no NCAA monies and conference media rights fees.Time to create a new college division 1A for smaller schools, a place where players play for 4 years.
Wouldn't/couldn't that be challenged up to the Supreme Court?Unfortunately the only remedy is for Congress to act.
Except he does things Congress should do, anyway. He doesn't care about checks and balances, laws, or The Constitution. So, I'd expect him to stick his nose in and muck it up and cause some damage, as usual.I teach law, including Constitutional law. I agree that there would be about zero chance of such an ExOrd being upheld by the courts. The underlying issues arise from the antitrust laws, which are statutes passed by Congress starting in the 1890's. The President does not have authority to change the antitrust laws through Executive Order, nor to change interpretations of those laws by the courts, including by the Supreme Court in NCAA v. Alston (2021, incidentally a 9-0 decision), the case that paved the way for NIL. Unfortunately the only remedy is for Congress to act.
Wouldn't/couldn't that be challenged up to the Supreme Court?
Anyone else a little worried that the co- chairs are Nick Saban and a Texas Tech guy? I'm not surprised the coach chairs are P4 centric, but I am a little worried about the next iteration of this idiocy, being even less advantageous to non-P4 schools.
True... The Court would certainly strike this down, given that NIL is now based on a recent 9-0 SCOTUS opinion... But then again who knows these daysExcept he does things Congress should do, anyway. He doesn't care about checks and balances, laws, or The Constitution. So, I'd expect him to stick his nose in and muck it up and cause some damage, as usual.
I would expect the commission to develop what it perceives to be a workable solution, which would then be ratified by Congress. Sorting this out is too big a hornets nest for Congress because anything you do to benefit one group of your constituents penalizes another group of your constituents. Having "a commission" decide the issue takes the heat off of individual representatives.I teach law, including Constitutional law. I agree that there would be about zero chance of such an ExOrd being upheld by the courts. The underlying issues arise from the antitrust laws, which are statutes passed by Congress starting in the 1890's. The President does not have authority to change the antitrust laws through Executive Order, nor to change interpretations of those laws by the courts, including by the Supreme Court in NCAA v. Alston (2021, incidentally a 9-0 decision), the case that paved the way for NIL. Unfortunately the only remedy is for Congress to act.