Monday, August 23, 2021

Record-breaking freshman class set to start fall semester

 

Record-breaking freshman class to attend FSU this fall

On Aug. 23, 7,200 first-year students walked to classes for the first time — a record-breaking number for a record-breaking year.

Following a slightly smaller number of first-year students in fall of 2020, the jump to 7,200 was surprising, considering the consistency of the previous years, according to the Office of Institutional Research at Florida State University. 

With a 4.3 GPA, 1310 SAT and 29 ACT, the average statistics for 2021 were at the higher end of the spectrum compared to every other years’ statistics on incoming freshman. Based on these numbers, it was seemingly more difficult to get in for the Fall 2021 school year, and yet FSU received about 10,000 more applications than in 2020. 

With 66,000 applications to review, Hege Ferguson, the director of Admissions, released a statement ensuring it wasn’t an accident that an additional 3,000 to 4,000 students were accepted into FSU this year.

“We have spent months reviewing academic records, reading essays and learning about the interests of our applicants," Ferguson said. "We had to make some very difficult choices, but in the end, we feel confident in our decisions.”


Record-breaking freshman class set to start fall semester

About 7,200 first-year students and a new president will be among the fresh faces on Florida State University’s campus as fall classes begin Monday, Aug. 23.

President Richard McCullough, who starts his second week as FSU’s 16th president Monday, is excited to join the largest freshman class in the university’s history and a record number of graduate students in becoming a part of the Florida State family.

“I’m thrilled to start my tenure at the beginning of a new academic year and to welcome a very impressive freshman class,” McCullough said. “This is not only the biggest freshman class but one of the brightest, and I can’t wait to see the contributions these students will make to our university community.”

More than 66,000 first-year students applied for admission to FSU for the summer and fall 2021 semesters. Of those first-year students who were accepted into the university for the summer and fall semesters:

  • The average high school grade point average was 4.3 with an average 1310 total SAT score and ACT composite score of 29.
  • The cohort includes students from 66 Florida counties and, all 50 states and the District of Columbia, and 49 countries. After Florida, the states with the most accepted freshmen are Georgia, New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Texas.
  • Women make up 60 percent of the new freshman class, while 40 percent of the students are male.
  • The top five majors selected are biological science, business, engineering, psychology and exploratory/undecided.

For the second consecutive year, FSU received more than 14,000 graduate school applications for the fall term — an 83 percent increase in applications since Fall 2017. This year’s graduate student cohort is expected to be FSU’s largest, exceeding last year’s record enrollment of nearly 9,700 graduate students.

ACC Member Statistics

Expenses by school​

https://richmond.com/sports/college...cle_9aa34890-0a03-5e7c-ab4b-7331572be3e2.html

Expenses by school​

SchoolRevenueDonations*TicketsExpensesSportsFB Asst.**FB support***
Clemson$129.9M$43.4M$29.9M$131.8M19$8.7M$7.2M
Florida State$129.5M$36.8M$17.3M$155.7M20$7.0M$3.6M
Ga. Tech$86.4M$11.M$10.4M$96.1M17$4.5M$1.7M
Louisville$140.9M$30.4M$27.5M$138.8M23$4.6M$2.4M
UNC$110.4M$21.6M$24.8M$113.0M28$5.8M$2.7M
N.C. State$86.6M$15.1M$23.5M$88.7M23$4.9M$3.0M
Virginia$110.3M$27.7M$15.5M$111.8M27$4.6M$2.8M
Virginia Tech$99.2M$21.8M$19.2M$97.5M22$4.3M$2.3M

ACC rivals' financial documents for 2019-20 - Public Schools Only

Each January, Division I athletic departments file a financial report of about 80 pages to the NCAA for the previous academic year. Below is Detailed annual financial reports filed by the ACC’s eight public institutions to the NCAA.

* Contributions collected and used in 2019-20.

** Total salaries, benefits and bonuses for the 10 assistant coaches permitted by the NCAA.

*** Total salaries, benefits for football support staff such as quality control coaches and recruiting assistants.

Expenses by school
Revenue
Louisville - $140.9M
Clemson - $129.9M
FSU - $129.5M
UNC - $110.4M
UVA- $110.3M
VT - $99.2M
NC ST - $86.6M
GT - $86.4M

Donations*
Clemson - $43.4M
FSU - $36.8M
Louisville - $30.4M
UVA- $27.7M
VT - $21.8M
UNC - $21.6M
NC ST - $15.1M
GT - $11M

Ticket Sales
Clemson - $29.9M
Louisville - $27.5M
UNC - $24.8M
NC ST - $23.5M
VT - $19.2M
FSU - $17.3M
UVA - $15.5M
GT - $10.4M

Expenses
FSU - $155.7M
Louisville - $138.8M
Clemson - $131.8M
UNC - $113.0M
UVA - $111.8M
VT - $97.5M
GT - $96.1M
NC ST - $88.7M

Total Sports Programs
UNC - 28
UVA - 27
NC ST - 23
Louisville - 23
VT - 22
FSU - 20
Clemson - 19
GT - 17

FB Asst. Total salaries**
Clemson - $8.7M
FSU -$7.0M
UNC - $5.8M
NC ST - $4.9M
Louisville - $4.6M
UVA - $4.6M
GT - $4.5M
VT - $4.3M

FB support staff Total salaries***
Clemson - $7.2M
FSU - $3.6M
NC ST - $3.0M
UVA - $2.8M
UNC - $2.7M
Louisville - $2.4M
VT - $2.3M
GT - $1.7M


Link
https://richmond.com/sports/college/teel...be3e2.html

Monday, August 16, 2021

TV Viewership #s

 Which college football programs bring in the most TV viewers?

Average TV Viewership, by school


Finally, his numbers - but I added the bar graphs and highlighted ACC schools in light blue, plausible expansion teams in pink:

SchoolVwrsgraphically
Ohio State5.19M===================================================
Alabama5.09M==================================================
Michigan4.18M=========================================
Notre Dame3.61M====================================
LSU3.22M================================
Auburn3.12M===============================
Georgia2.91M=============================
Oklahoma2.90M=============================
Clemson2.67M==========================
Penn State2.55M=========================
Florida2.46M========================
Wisconsin2.27M======================
Texas2.269M======================
Florida State2.23M======================
Michigan State2.20M======================
Southern Cal1.98M===================
Tennessee1.85M==================
Texas A&M1.75M=================
Oklahoma State1.64M================
Mississippi1.61M================
Iowa1.57M===============
Nebraska1.51M===============
Miami1.503M===============
TCU1.495M==============
Stanford1.43M==============
Oregon1.34M=============
Arkansas1.33M=============
Washington1.32M=============
Mississippi State1.31M=============
West Virginia1.27M============
Virginia Tech1.26M============
UCLA1.25M============
Louisville1.22M============
Indiana1.17M===========
Baylor1.12M===========
South Carolina1.07M==========
Texas Tech921K=========
Washington State909K=========
Northwestern867K========
Utah856K========
Minnesota803K========
Pittsburgh781K=======
North Carolina749K=======
Iowa State747K=======
California730K=======
BYU714K=======
NC State703K=======
Arizona State695K======
Syracuse694K======
Houston689K======
Kansas State682K======
Maryland681K======
Purdue620K======
Georgia Tech615K======
Missouri611K======
Colorado610K======
Virginia592K=====
UCF566K=====
Memphis564K=====
Arizona561K=====
Kentucky484K====
Boise State476K====
Vanderbilt438K====
Cincinnati430K====
Duke410K====
USF407K====
Boston College403K====
Illinois401K====
Wake Forest398K===
Kansas346K===
Oregon State295K==
Rutgers266K==
SMU232K==


https://csnbbs.com/thread-920637-page-5.html


Zach Miller has posted an article "Which college football programs bring in the most TV viewers?

He logged 1,516 regular-season games with available viewership data from the five-year span of 2015-19 (left out 2020 for obvious reasons). That includes every televised game involving Notre Dame, BYU, Army or a team from the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, Big 12, Pac-12, AAC or Mountain West. He ranked every Power 5 team, plus Notre Dame and the eight schools most popularly mentioned as Big 12 expansion candidates. The numbers next to each school indicate the average number of viewers per week from 2015–19. Streaming numbers are included when available.

Here is his ACC Viewership (Your first column)

Clemson #9 (2.67M avg weekly viewers)
FSU #14 (2.23M avg weekly viewers)
Miami #23 (1.503M avg weekly viewers)
VT #31 (1.26M avg weekly viewers)
Louisville #31 (1.22M avg weekly viewers)
Pitt #42 (781K avg weekly viewers)
UNC #43 (749K avg weekly viewers)
NC State #47 (703K avg weekly viewers)
Syracuse #49 (694K avg weekly viewers)
GT #54 (615K avg weekly viewers)
UVA #57 (592K avg weekly viewers)
DUKE #65 (410K avg weekly viewers)
BC #67 (403K avg weekly viewers)
Wake #69 (398K avg weekly viewers)

ACC Partial mbr
Notre Dame #4 (3.61M avg weekly viewers)


So my question is where do you get your rankings for your first column? I would love to look at them.


Link
https://medium.com/run-it-back-with-zach...c03c689e50



Sports Media Watch (SMW) is the source for both analysis. SMW reports viewership on all rated games.

Some of the major differences in the methodologies used:
1) Zach Miller looked at 5 years of viewership…2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019; I looked at 4 years of viewership…2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.
2) In stack ranking programs Zach Miller only considered regular season games, only ranked “avg viewers” data, reported the top 73 FBS programs and assumed zero viewers for non-rated games; I looked at “avg viewers” and “total viewers”, stack ranked only P5 teams, incorporated both regular & post-season and excluded non-rated games from the analysis.


Why does the SEC get more for TV rights?

Logically, TV money should be about delivering TV audience, right? I mean, isn't that why a first tier game (T1) is worth more than a second tier (T2) one? In "What is a Tier 1 CFB Game Worth?", we tried to estimate the average values of these games and came up with

T1: $13M each

T2: $4M each

T3: $1M each

What we didn't do, however, is tell you the TV ratings associated with each tier. So I looked at the games actually selected as tier one by the networks (for the SEC, the CBS games; for the ACC, the ABC games) to get a feel for the expected TV ratings of a T1 game.

T1: 3.8 million viewers or more

T2: 0.25 to 3.8 million viewers

T3: less than 250,000 viewers

That's a pretty high bar for the first tier, but you'd think second tier should be easy to achieve, right? You might be surprised as we continue...

Here are the T1 (greater than or equal to 3.80 million viewers) conference games from 2016 through 2019 for both SEC and ACC (I removed non-conference games to avoid confusing the issue, nor did I include the pandemic season of 2020):

SECT1ACCT1
20162016
ALA-LSU10.39LOU-CLM9.29
TAM-ALA8.46FSU-LOU6.22
AUB-ALA8.24FSU-MIA5.54
ALA-MS8.17CLM-FSU5.38
ALA-TEN6.58PIT-CLM4.93
TEN-TAM6.55NCS-CLM4.51
FL-TEN5.54
AUB-UGA4.99
FL-UGA4.45
ALA-ARK4.44
FL-ARK4.26
UGA-TEN4.22
LSU-AUB4.1
ARK-TAM3.87
20172017
ALA-AUG13.66CLM-LOU5.06
UGA-AUB7.41CLM-VT4.61
ALA-MSU7.03MIA-PIT4.56
LSU-ALA6.73
TEN-FL5.13
ALA-TAM4.77
TEN-ALA4.45
LSU-FL4.13
UGA-TEN3.95
ARK-ALA3.87
20182018
ALA-LSU11.54VT-FSU5.58
AUB-ALA9.13SYR-CLM4.62
UGA-FL6.35CLM-BC3.93
LSU-AUB5.94
TAM-ALA5.65
UGA-LSU5.54
MSU-ALA5.42
LSU-FL4.7
UGA-UK4.39
ALA-TEN4.31
ALA-MS4.11
AUG-UGA3.99
2019Vwr(M)2019Vwr(M)
LSU-ALA16.64CLM-UNC4.4
ALA-AUB11.43
AUB-LSU7.18
UGA-UF6.98
UGA-AUB6.77
UF-LSU6.45
AUB-UF6.43
ALA-TAM6.11
ALA-SC4.95
TAM-UGA4.89
AUB-TAM4.66
TEN-ALA4.25
UGA-TEN3.9
LSU-MSU3.86

Thursday, August 5, 2021

Playoff Payouts: 2014-2020

 

Playoff Payouts: 2014-2020

The first six years of the College Football Playoff saw it distribute $2.7 billion to FBS conferences and independents. As was the tradition under the Bowl Championship Series, FCS conferences receive annual fixed payouts as well.

The majority of College Football Playoff revenue distributed is allocated as fixed fees that are not dependent on performance or berths in the semifinals, contract bowls or access bowls. Check out my 2020-21 conference-by-conference breakdown for an example.

College Football Playoff Payouts from 2014-2020 by Conference

Here are the totals by conference for the first six years of the College Football Playoff (from the 2014-15 season to 2019-20):

CONFERENCETOTAL
Southeastern Conference$452,329,310
Atlantic Coast Conference$415,026,040
Big Ten Conference$414,478,180
Big 12 Conference$410,816,228
Pac-12 Conference$406,003,943
American Athletic Conference$138,376,487
Mountain West Conference$116,587,690
Mid-American Conference$99,547,896
Conference USA$92,863,191
Sun Belt Conference$91,812,887
Notre Dame University$31,300,962
Brigham Young University$1,859,785
U.S. Military Academy$1,859,785
Big Sky Conference$1,598,581
Big South Conference$1,598,581
Colonial Conference$1,598,581
Mid-Eastern Conference$1,598,581
Missouri Valley Conference$1,598,581
Ohio Valley Conference$1,598,581
Southern Conference$1,598,581
Southland Conference$1,598,581
Southwestern Conference$1,598,581
University of Massachusetts$1,242,845
Patriot League$536,965
Liberty University$310,396
New Mexico State University$310,396
U.S. Naval Academy$307,544
TOTAL$2,689,957,756

Although the majority of the payouts each year are predetermined regardless of performance (see last year’s payout plan), schools who make the semifinals receive $6 million each and schools selected for access bowls receive $4 million each. The only additional monies for playing in the title game are for expenses. Accordingly, those with the most appearances have the edge when it comes to total payouts over the years.

Appearances in the College Football Playoff Semifinals by conference 2014-2020:

SEC7
ACC6
Big Ten4
Big 124
Pac-122
Notre Dame1

ACC finances

 https://csnbbs.com/thread-925968-page-4.html

As David Teel pointed out on Richmond.com, the way the ACC distributes its money to each member, it would take an additional $77 million in annual revenue for a new conference member just to increase the annual payout by $3 million. The ACC’s best way forward might not be adding anyone, rather figuring out how to improve the dormant national brands it already has.

How do the ACC’s finances work?

A 1984 Supreme Court ruling (NCAA v. Oklahoma Board of Regents) gave conferences the freedom to negotiate their own television contracts, specifically for football, and such agreements are the economic engine of the entire major college sports enterprise.

In its most recent federal tax filing, for the 2019-20 academic year, the ACC reported $496.7 million in revenue, two-thirds of which ($332.8 million) came from television. The league collected another $125 million in bowl income, a lion’s share from the College Football Playoff.

In short, football accounts for 75-80% of conference revenue.

Similar to its peers, the ACC distributes about 90% of total revenue to member schools in virtually equal shares. The average 2019-20 share for the league’s 14 full-time members was $32.4 million, and each of these amounts was an all-time high for the conference.

The full shares ranged from Clemson’s $37 million to Georgia Tech’s $30.9 million. Notre Dame, an ACC member for sports other than football, received $10.8 million.

What’s the ACC’s money problem?

Record numbers aside, the league’s average distribution ranked last among the Power Five conferences. Moreover, it lagged far behind the Big Ten’s $54.3 million and SEC’s $45.5 million, gaps that soon will widen.

While the ACC’s exclusive TV deal with ESPN runs through 2035-36, the Big Ten is negotiating new contracts that will start in 2023 and were projected, pre-COVID, to boost distributions to $70 million by 2025. The SEC already has announced a new arrangement that, starting in 2024, gives ESPN exclusive rights to its football and men’s basketball.

The notable change for the SEC and ESPN is the move of the league’s marquee 3:30 p.m., Saturday football game, currently aired on CBS, to ESPN/ABC. For that one weekly game, ESPN agreed to pay a reported $300 million annually, almost as much as it pays for the entire ACC sports portfolio.

Add the Texas and Oklahoma brands, and the SEC package becomes even more valuable.

Why did the ACC fall so far behind?

There are three primary reasons: football, demographics and membership instability.

Just as the Big Ten and SEC were planning their dedicated television networks, the ACC was enduring an ill-timed football drought. For 12 consecutive seasons, 2001-12, no team from the ACC finished among The Associated Press’ top five.

This compounded the league’s unique demographics.

The ACC has the Power Five’s most diverse mix of public and private institutions, which translates to smaller student bodies, fan bases and television audiences, even as the conference stretches from Boston to Miami and includes other top-30 media markets such as Atlanta, Pittsburgh and Raleigh.

Average full-time undergraduate enrollments in the Big Ten (31,557) and SEC (24,164) tower over the ACC (15,867), according to U.S. Department of Education data.

Instability blindsided the ACC in November 2012, when charter member Maryland announced its intention to join the Big Ten. The Terps’ motivation, of course, was money.

In large measure, these hurdles explain why the Big Ten Network launched in 2007, the SEC Network in 2014, the ACC Network in 2019.

How can the ACC create new revenue?

Virginia Tech president Tim Sands said in April that the conference’s presidents and chancellors made clear to commissioner candidates that closing, not erasing, the revenue gap is “a major expectation” and that Phillips is “the right guy” to do it.

Unlike the other new Power Five commissioners — the Big Ten hired Kevin Warren from the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings, and the Pac-12 hired George Kliavkoff from MGM Resorts — Phillips is connected throughout the college sports universe. He’s a former administrator at Arizona State, Notre Dame, Northern Illinois and Northwestern, the latter two as athletic director, invaluable experience in this turbulent time.

But absent Notre Dame bringing its marquee football brand to the table, there is no obvious path to a revenue windfall. Anticipated in late September, a carriage deal to make the ACC Network available to Comcast Xfinity cable subscribers would help, but not enough.

Social and mainstream media teem with suggestions.

ESPN basketball analyst Jay Bilas recommends an ACC-SEC merger, a union that would make Phillips expendable and might not be of greater television value than the sum of its two parts. The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel wrote of a potential marriage with the Pac-12, an improbable arrangement that might work more simply as a scheduling alliance for football and perhaps men’s basketball.

One issue there is that many football programs, including Virginia Tech, have booked their nonconference schedules through the decade, and escaping those contracts can be pricey.

Fans on Twitter pine for schools such as West Virginia, Central Florida and even Penn State, though the Nittany Lions would have to check out on the Big Ten’s riches.

On former ESPN radio host Dan Le Batard’s new podcast, former ESPN president John Skipper envisioned four “super conferences” with at least 16 teams each, a concept many have advocated for years. A University of North Carolina graduate, Skipper was central to the ACC Network’s creation, and on the podcast he imagined the ACC rescuing a Big 12 leftover.

“Oddly enough, [the ACC] wouldn’t be a bad home for Kansas, though geographically it’s crazy,” Skipper said. “[The Jayhawks would] bring in another state for the conference network, and that has to be kept in mind.

“If you add a college from a state you’re already in, you don’t get any more distributor fees. … Even with fairly small populations, it’s still a lot of money for those networks. [It’s] a dollar for every good citizen of the state who has a pay [cable subscription], which is declining but is still a lot of people.”

Skipper’s a television genius, and Kansas’ basketball heritage is unquestioned. But the Jayhawks are 26-108 in football over the last 12 seasons, and if you want to plant the ACC Network in a new state, why not the seventh-largest by population, one that is next door to conference member Louisville?

That would be Ohio, home to the Cincinnati Bearcats. Cincinnati has not only a proud basketball tradition but also a football program that is 31-6 in the last three years.

But would Cincinnati and the Ohio market, or any other school, group of schools or alliance make more money for the ACC? The league’s media consultants and ESPN will run the numbers, and at the risk of math overload, here’s a pretty straightforward equation:

Any new ACC member would need to generate approximately $32.4 million annually, the conference’s average share, just to keep everyone’s piece of the pie static. To bump that per-school distribution by $1 million in what would then be a 15-team league, add $15 million to that $32.4 million, or $47.4 million.

To increase distributions by $3 million, we’re talking $77.4 million in additional revenue from one school, the original $32.4 million plus three multiples of $15 million, or $45 million.


The ACC’s expansion calculations could take time, but how much likely hinges on whether officials believe any potential target is primed to jump elsewhere.

What about Notre Dame?

Notre Dame football has long been the ACC’s target, even before the school joined the league as a part-time member in 2013 and agreed to play five football games annually versus ACC opponents. But as Fighting Irish athletic director Jack Swarbrick has said repeatedly, football independence is part of Notre Dame’s DNA.

The Irish-ACC relationship has been mutually beneficial, providing Notre Dame a quality home for its basketball programs and Olympic sports while enhancing the conference’s television appeal/revenue and selling out its football stadiums. Indeed, the Irish were an essential lure in selling ESPN on the ACC Network.

The Notre Dame-ACC dynamic veered suddenly last year as the pandemic prompted leagues to curb most, if not all, non-conference football competition. Swarbrick and Co., were stuck, and the ACC offered a lifeline, welcoming them into the league for a cameo that paved their path to the College Football Playoff.

With the ACC in a financial pinch, generosity suggests that Notre Dame return the favor, as Irish football would enrich both parties. But Notre Dame relishes independence and its national schedule more than the windfall of full conference membership.

An all-in-or-all-out ultimatum to the Irish might ease any frustrations with their selfishness, but if they declined and departed, ESPN would have cause to renegotiate its ACC deal and offer considerably less money.

Two related forces could prompt Notre Dame to bring its football brand to the ACC, the conference to which it is contractually obligated through 2035-36: playoff access and ability to schedule.

The Irish have qualified for the four-team College Football Playoff twice in seven years, as an undefeated independent in 2018 and once-beaten ACC member in 2020. Swarbrick chaired the working group that developed the 12-team CFP proposal — the field would include the Bowl Subdivision’s six highest-rated conference champions and six at-large selections — and said the model would strengthen Notre Dame’s independence.


Link
https://www.wralsportsfan.com/giglio-the.../19805189/