Thursday, March 28, 2019

COE Update



https://www.tallahassee.com/story/opinion/2019/03/22/famu-fsu-college-engineering-building-momentum-opinion/3234042002/

If you walk the halls of the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering and talk to students, the excitement they have about their future careers is palpable. They are studying to design bridges and robots, develop the devices and procedures that solve medical problems, and advance the latest manufacturing technologies. With knowledge in their pockets and their lives in front of them, the possibilities are endless.
The same sense of optimism is true for the institution itself, which is the only college of engineering in the nation that belongs to two universities. Four years after FAMU and FSU agreed to come forward in a renewed spirit of cooperation, the college has soared 19 points in the national rankings, increased external funding by 30 percent, recruited 20 outstanding new faculty, expanded programs to Panama City and introduced two new engineering degree programs.
Graduate student applications are up 16 percent at both FAMU and FSU compared with this time last year. And the college has built strong partnerships with top employers in the industry, including Northrop Grumman, Texas Instruments and Dow Chemical, who praise the preparation and diversity of its graduates.
The success of the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering comes at a time when employers are hungry for new engineering graduates, with industrial engineers, computer systems engineers and civil engineers among the most highly sought and highly paid STEM job openings in Florida, according to the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity.
In fact, almost all students at the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering have a job, or are confident in getting one after graduation. Bachelor’s degree graduates earn an average of $60,000 in their first year of employment and doctoral degree graduates earn well over $100,000 mid-career. Importantly, Ph.D.s in engineering occupy three of the top 10 best doctoral degrees by salary, according to PayScale.
Credit for the college’s momentum goes to our elected leaders and the Board of Governors, as well as FAMU President Larry Robinson, FSU President John Thrasher and College of Engineering Dean Murray Gibson, who work relentlessly to make sure every student gets the experience that will excite them about learning and prepare them for the workforce.
Leaders at both universities are working alongside the Board of Governors to enthusiastically make the case for a legislative budget request of $6.4 million. This funding would ensure the college can continue its gains in student retention, graduation and recruitment, retain faculty, broaden its curriculum, create more flexibility for students, decrease class sizes and contribute to the State University System’s push to raise its national profile on research.
The FAMU-FSU College of Engineering has made excellent progress, and much is at stake in the next few years as the college — and its home institutions — continue to push to the next level. The college’s diverse makeup allows students to train in real-world cross-cultural teams, which is considered a huge asset in today’s collaborative engineering environment.
Further, FSU is on the cusp of breaking into the Top 25 in U.S. News & World Report, and FAMU is among the nation’s top five schools for improving the social mobility of its graduates. An excellent engineering school is a crucial part of both equations.
I am proud of the college’s progress, hopeful about its future, and excited for the potential it has to transform the lives of our students and the future of our state.
Marshall Criser III is chancellor of the State University System of Florida.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Conference Basketball Spending

My concern here is the ACC is putting most of it's $$$ eggs in the 20% revenue baske (basketball) instead of the 80% revenue basket (football).

With the revenue gap growing, this could become an issue.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/03/mbb-news-and-more-32319.html




Duke fake's scientific data




Interactions for MBB team accounts since NCAA bracket was revealed March 17.






Jay Bilas does it again...

Yes, an ACC grad, but again, ESPN always overcredits SEC and undercredits ACC......even with 'ACC' talking heads.  Pathetic.  The ACC can't pull it's own head out of it's ass.


Monday, March 25, 2019

FSU NCAA Tourney Run Factoids (Updated)





https://csnbbs.com/thread-873233-page-2.html


Number of ACC teams to the Sweet 16 last 5 years:

2015 - 5
2016 - 6
2017 - 1
2018 - 4
2019 - 5






10 schools that are the only ones to win at least one NCAA Tournament game each of the last three seasons:

FSU
Duke
North Carolina
Gonzaga
Kansas
Michigan 
Kentucky
Purdue
Florida
Villanova 

Not bad company.





Football factoid. Undefeated National Champions since 1999 (past 20 years)




Friday, March 22, 2019

Florida State University wins ‘national championship of student success’



https://news.fsu.edu/news/university-news/2019/03/19/florida-state-university-wins-national-championship-of-student-success/

While Florida State University fans will be rooting on the Seminoles as the NCAA basketball tournaments get underway this week, the university can already claim a national title — in student success.
Florida State topped a field of 68 schools to win the 2019 national championship of student success, according to the Eduventures Student Success Ratings, which are used to rate schools based on their student success records and identify best practice institutions.
“Student success is at the heart of our mission at Florida State, so it’s exciting to be recognized nationally for our commitment in this area,” said Sally McRorie, provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs.
This week, Eduventures took a lighthearted look at the quality of higher education through a basketball lens and asked which schools would come out on top if the NCAA men’s basketball tournament was “about earning points on retaining and graduating students.”
To answer that question, Eduventures used its student success ratings as basketball scores in this year’s NCAA Division I men’s basketball championship bracket. Florida State won the “tournament” with a student success rating of 73. Joining FSU in the “final four” were Auburn, Virginia Commonwealth and UC Irvine.
Eduventures Student Success Ratings take into consideration a performance model of how institutions “should” perform given the students they serve, along with the institution’s historical trends. While the ratings are not about absolute retention and graduation numbers, Florida State boasts the best four-year graduation rate in the state of Florida at 72 percent, as well as one of the top first-year retention rates in the nation at 94 percent.
As for the real brackets, both the FSU men’s and women’s basketball teams were selected for the NCAA championship tournaments. The Florida State men’s squad is the No. 4 seed in the West Region and will meet No. 13 Vermont at 2 p.m. Thursday, March 21, in Hartford, Connecticut. The FSU women’s team is seeded No. 5 in the Greensboro Region and will face 12th-seeded Bucknell at 4 p.m. Friday, March 22, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
“We know our basketball teams strive for excellence on the court and in the classroom, and we wish them the best of luck throughout the tournaments,” McRorie said.
For the full list of student success ratings, visit https://encoura.org/2019-student-success-tournament-florida-state-reigns/.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Season tix sales, etc






The Gene Board



The Gene Board

ACC Tournament TV Ratings




Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Ranking National Champs, last 50 years

Great find by https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/


https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/03/national-champs-last-50-years.html


11. 1999 Florida State Seminoles
Record: 12-0
Finished: Beat No. 2 Virginia Tech 46-29 in the Sugar Bowl
Final Ranking: No.1
Notable Wins: No. 10 Georgia Tech (41-35), No. 20 North Carolina State (42-11), No. 19 Miami (31-21), No. 4 Florida (30-23), and No. 2 Virginia Tech (46-29)
Consensus All-Americans: Three (Sebastian Janikowski, Corey Simon, Peter Warrick)
Bobby Bowden’s best team was the first in history to go “wire-to-wire” in the modern era, meaning it started the preseason at No. 1 and held the ranking throughout the entire season. The Seminoles knocked off five ranked opponents, including an undefeated Virginia Tech team led by Michael Vick, to win Bowden’s second national championship.

10. 2004 USC Trojans


9. 1988 Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Record: 12-0
Finished: Beat No. 3 West Virginia 34-21 in the Fiesta Bowl
Final Ranking: No. 1
Notable Wins: No. 9 Michigan (19-17), No. 1 Miami (31-30), No. 2 USC (27-10), and No. 3 West Virginia (34-21)
Consensus All-Americans: Two (Frank Stams, Michael Stonebreaker)
With a roster that included 30 players who would go on to the NFL, the Irish beat the teams that would finish No. 2 (Miami), No. 4 (Michigan), No. 5 (West Virginia), and No. 7 (USC) en route to the national championship. The wins against the Hurricanes and the Wolverines were by razor thin margins, but the other 10 victories were by double digits.

8. 2005 Texas Longhorns
7. 1972 USC Trojans
6. 2009 Alabama Crimson Tide

5. 2018 Clemson Tigers
Record: 15-0
Finished: Beat No. 1 Alabama 44-16 in the College Football Playoff National Championship
Final Ranking: No. 1
Notable Wins: Texas A&M (28-26), Syracuse (27-23), No. 16 NC State (41-7), No. 17 Boston College (27-7), South Carolina (56-35) Pittsburgh (42-10), No. 3 Notre Dame (30-3), No. 1 Alabama (44-16)
Consensus All-Americans: Three (Clelin Ferrell, Mitch Hyatt, Christian Wilkins)
Clemson is the first major college football program to go 15-0 since the 1800s, and 12 of those wins came against teams that went to bowls. The Tigers' run in the postseason also was the most dominant in the history of the young College Football Playoff.

4. 1995 Nebraska Cornhuskers

3. 2013 Florida State Seminoles
Record: 14-0 
Finished: Beat No. 2 Auburn 34-31 in BCS National Championship Game 
Final Ranking: No. 1 
Notable Wins: No. 25 Maryland (63-0), No. 3 Clemson (51-14), No. 7 Miami (41-14), No. 20 Duke (45-7), and No. 2 Auburn (34-31) 
Consensus All-Americans: Three (Lamarcus Joyner, Byron Stork, Jameis Winston) 
Quarterback Jameis Winston became the second freshman to win the Heisman Trophy as he led an offense that outscored its opponents 723-170 to become the highest-scoring team in college football history. The Seminoles beat all but two of its opponents by 27 points or more. Those two exceptions were a 48-34 win over Boston College in Chestnut Hill and the 34-31 win over Auburn in the title game, which ended a run of seven straight national championships for the SEC.

2. 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers

1. 2001 Miami Hurricanes
Record: 12-0
Finished: Beat No. 4 Nebraska 37-14 in Rose Bowl
Final Ranking: No. 1
Notable Wins: No. 13 Florida State (49-27), No. 15 Syracuse (59-0), No. 11 Washington (65-7), No. 14 Virginia Tech (26-24), and No. 4 Nebraska (37-14)
Consensus All-Americans: Two (Bryant McKinnie, Ed Reed)
The Hurricanes garnered the No. 1 ranking after the first game and went on to beat all of their opponents by an average of 32.9 points. They also had the third-best offense and top-ranked defense that season. With 38 NFL draft picks (17 in the first round), the 2001 Miami squad is widely regarded by college football fans and writers as the greatest of all time.

NOTE: ACC teams produced 3 of the top 5 strongest national champs of the last half century!

SUMMARY, ACC-Related Champions:
#InstitutionYear(s)
1Georgia Tech1990
1Pittsburgh1976
3Notre Dame1977, 1973, 1988
3Clemson1981, 2016, 2018
3Florida State1993, 1999, 2013
5Miami1989, 1983, 1991, 1987, 2001

Monday, March 18, 2019

FSU basketball factoids post 2019 final home game (Va Tech) (UPDATED)


https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/at-least-we-made-acc-history.253533/

No 27-win team from the ACC had ever been given a seed lower than a 1 or 2.

Not only could we not muster a 2, we couldn't even muster a 3.

At least they made up for it by giving us the highest 4 and a close geographic region. Oh wait. 

https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/fsu-is-the-only-team-to-play-five-games-against-1-seeds.253512/#post-4342865

FSU is the only team to play five games against #1 seeds


FSU played:
- UVA twice (#1 seed, ACC Champions)
- Duke twice (#1 seed, ACCT Champions)
- UNC (#1 seed)

In addition, FSU also played:
- VT twice (4-seed)
- Purdue (Champions of Big Ten)
- LSU (Champions of SEC)
- Villanova (Champions of Big East)
- Saint Louis (Champions of A-10 Tournament)
- Syracuse in the Carrier Dome
- Louisville
- Florida
- NC State (Won 22 game in the ACC and beat SEC Champion Auburn)
- Clemson twice (Gave everyone else fits the last two months)

https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/fsu-beat-the-regular-season-champs-of-the-big-ten-acc-and-sec.253409/

FSU beat the regular season champs of the Big Ten, ACC and SEC


Purdue, UVA and LSU

Our 1972 National Finalist team had a an NCAA run and defeated the Big Ten Champions ( Dave Winfield's Minnesota), the SEC Champions ( Aloph Rupp's last Kentucky team) and the ACC Champions ( Dean Smith, with Bob Mc Adop, Bobby Jones and George Karl) on the way to the Finals. We lost by 5 in L.A. to the PAC 10 Champs, John Wooden and Bill Walton's UCLA.


http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2019/03/acc-bball-title-game.html


Number of trips to the ACC Basketball Championship Game since 2009:

UNC - 6
Duke - 6
Florida State - 3
Virginia - 3
Notre Dame - 2
Georgia Tech - 1
Miami - 1
Syracuse - 0
Louisville - 0
Maryland - 0
NC State - 0
Virginia Tech - 0
Pitt - 0
Boston College - 0
Clemson - 0
Wake Forest - 0



http://www.theterritory.org/phorum/read.php?5,681779,681872#msg-681872

I believe our basketball team is now 2 wins away from most wins in a 4 year period. I could be wrong


95 wins from 2008-09 to 2011-12 is the most ..... we're on 93 since 2015-16, second most. Have also matched that previous stretch with four straight 20-win seasons, our most ever. It's kind of biased to recent years because teams didn't play as many games going back in the decades. But impressive nonetheless. 

There's also this -- this is our 14th straight season with a winning record, tying the longest streak in program history ... also did it from '67-68 to '80-81.

http://www.theterritory.org/phorum/read.php?5,681729

Question: Who are the only Noles in FSU history to have 1100 points, 600 rebounds, 200 assists, and 100 steals. Yeah, we might miss him a little next year


Answer: Doug Edwards, Bobby Sura, Terrance Mann















Saturday, March 16, 2019

ACC BBall Title Game

Given the disparity in funding between FSU football and basketball, FSU is getting ripped off in football.


Number of trips to the ACC Basketball Championship Game since 2009:

UNC - 6
Duke - 6
Florida State - 3
Virginia - 3
Notre Dame - 2
Georgia Tech - 1
Miami - 1
Syracuse - 0
Louisville - 0
Maryland - 0
NC State - 0
Virginia Tech - 0
Pitt - 0
Boston College - 0
Clemson - 0
Wake Forest - 0


During that span, FSU football played for the following ACC Titles:

Won in 2012, 2013, 2014.

Lost lost in 2010.

Friday, March 15, 2019

ACC Network news, tons of it (UPDATED)

So the ACC added some great cable companies, has still put itself in a horrible revenue situation, and once again, insists on giving away it's limited revenue to Raycom so Tobacco Road can leach off the ACC.


https://csnbbs.com/thread-872266-page-2.html

Saying ESPN sold it's rights to Raycom is totally disingenuous, that's true on paper only. The ACC made ESPN sell a package of rights to Raycom as a condition of the deal. It was an artificial carve out, otherwise ESPN would have never sold those rights, and wouldn't have had to buy them back. 

Acting like ESPN was the one who sold them by choice, and ESPN bought them back, and ESPN decided it would be good to have Raycom produce games for them is just being purposely obtuse.

In the last TV contract, the ACC required ESPN to turn around and sell that package to Raycom to keep Raycom alive. Had the ACC not required it, ESPN wouldn't have done it. You can know that by the fact that ESPN has sold nothing back to Raycom to broadcast.

The ACC forced a middle man into the deal that was unnecessary and wouldn't be there, and ate some of the value. The maddening thing is that Raycom just turned around and resold some of those rights to Fox. So for a lot of the games, Raycom did nothing but middle and take a piece of what would have been a ESPN-Fox transaction. Absurd.

Maybe giving Raycom a production deal reduced the up front cost of the buy back, but they wouldn't have even had to do the buy back if they hadn't forced Raycom into the deal to begin with.

If you want to defend the ACC's subsidization of Raycom on some grounds of nostalgia or partners or whatever, please do so. But don't make it out to be a sound business move for the ACC to have subsidized Raycom in the last contract, or that the production deal makes any sense outside the context of trying to mitigate that bad decision.

There's no business reason or financial benefit for not cutting ties with Raycom in the last contract. There may be financial benefit to cutting this production deal in exchange for a lower buyback of content you should have never put in Raycom's hands in the first place. At BEST it's making the least awful of a bad situation.

Of course, it could be much worse than that, because there's no history that the ACC is making prudent financial decisions when it comes to protecting Raycom. For all we know, the ACC paid a premium for the buyback, AND signed a production deal. That would have been the advantage of buying them out clean...if the ties were cut, then at least you would know. But now in perpetuity, you'll always have to wonder what percentage of the schools' disbursements are being siphoned off to subsidize an obsolete business that wouldn't otherwise exist without the giveaway.


https://www.cordcuttersnews.com/playstat...this-year/

Quote:As of today though ACC Network has announced that DIRECTV, Google Fiber, Hulu Live TV, Layer3 TV, Optimum, PlayStation Vue, Suddenlink, and Verizon Fios will carry the ACC Network. (Currently, only DIRECTV is listed not DIRECTV NOW.)

https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/how-much-would-it-actually-cost-to-leave-the-acc.253050/#post-4333712

Pursuant to the GOR (which was done in 2013 and extended further in 2016), FSU gave up all 1st, 2nd and 3rd tier media rights. 

The ACC network will launch 5 years after the SEC network launched, 7 years after Pac networks launched, and 12 years after the Big 10 network launched. 

The ACC also receives the smallest per member payouts for giving up those rights. 

Here are the per member payouts of the major conferences as of '17, who holds what rights and when the deal expires:

Big 12 ($28.7 million per member for FY'17):
1st and 2nd tier - ESPN and Fox (expires 2024-25)
Third tier – Each member. 
Note: ESPN and Fox pay the Big 12 $200 million per year for their TV rights. For their third tier rights, Texas receive an additional $15 million from its individual deal, OU gets an additional $8-$9 million, and schools like Baylor, TCU, West Virginia and Oklahoma State, get an additional $6-$8 million.

Pac 12 ($28.7 million per member for FY'17):
1st and 2nd tier - ESPN and Fox (expires in 2023-24)
Third tier - PAC Network 
Note: ESPN and Fox pay the Pac 12 $250 million per year for their TV rights. The PAC-12 has retained third tier rights for the PAC Network. The Pac-12 Network is owned by the Pac-12 Conference and generates money for the conference.

ACC ($26 million per member for FY'17):
1st, 2nd and third tier - ESPN (expires 2035-36) 
Note: ESPN pays the ACC $240 million per year for all TV rights, but in 2019, the ACC Network starts and could be a source of additional revenue per member. ESPN will own the ACC network, so ESPN will continue to own all TV rights for ACC members.

SEC ($41 million per member for FY '17)
1st and 2nd tier - CBS and ESPN (expires in 2033-34)
Third tier - SEC Network
Note: CBS and ESPN pay the SEC $380 million per year for their TV rights. ESPN owns the SEC network, so ESPN will continue to own all TV rights for SEC members, but the SEC network currently generates money for the SEC.

Big 10 ($38.5 million for FY '17):
1st tier – ESPN, Fox (expire in 2022-23) and CBS (hoops)
Third tier - Big 10 Network
Note: Reportedly, ESPN, Fox and CBS are now paying the Big 10 around $440 million per year for their TV rights. Fox just paid $240 million per year for just half of the Big Ten's 1st tier media rights package, which is about 25 football games and 50 men's basketball games. ESPN pay $190 million per year. CBS is paying $10 million per year on average for some basketball rights. The Big 10 retains some third tier rights that go to the Big 10 Network by virtue of its partial ownership of the Big 10 network. The Big-10 Network is a joint venture between Fox Sports and the Big Ten, with Fox Entertainment Group as 51% stakeholder and operating partner, and the Big Ten Conference owning a 49% stake. The Big 10 network currently generates revenues for its members.

Swofford has put the ACC in the worst position in terms of third tier rights/conference network and the ability to bid media rights out to the market. 

The Big 10 has a network up and running and won't have the opportunity to re-bid and renegotiate its overall media deal until '22-'23.
The Pac 12 has a network up and running and won't have the opportunity to re-bid and renegotiate its overall deal until '23-'24.
The Big 12 has retained its third tier rights and won't have the opportunity to re-bid and renegotiate its overall deal until '24-'25.
The SEC has a network up and running and won't have the opportunity to re-bid and renegotiate its overall deal until '33-'34.
The ACC does not have a network up and running and won't have the opportunity to re-bid and renegotiate its overall deal until '35-'36.



https://csnbbs.com/thread-872266.html

https://www.greensboro.com/sports/accxtr...0b687.html

Quote:Raycom takes new role as ACC Network plans to debut
Ownership of two high-end production trucks along with its longtime relationship with the league and ESPN made it the perfect partner to continue working behind the scenes on broadcasts when the ACC Network launches on Aug. 22.

“We got a very, very good — lucrative — production contract from ESPN,” Raycom CEO Jimmy Rayburn said. “A lot of the games next year will still be produced from top to bottom, but they just won’t have the Raycom name on it.

“Our bread and butter will still be the ACC, just in a different form.”

Not only will Raycom remain in a production role, but it will also continue to serve as the league's digital partner, help develop some programming on the ACC Network and manage the league's rights.

ACC still not investing in football (where 80% of the revenue resides)




The Most-Valuable College Basketball Teams



https://www.forbes.com/sites/chrissmith/2019/03/12/the-most-valuable-college-basketball-teams/#45c05e283225





College Basketball’s

Most Valuable Teams

The Big Ten and ACC dominate college basketball’s financial game, contributing more than half the list. Louisville has weathered down years and off-court scandals, but continues to rule the realm
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