Tuesday, November 30, 2021

FSU Athletic Debt

 

Fitch Affirms FSU Financial Assistance's (FL) Revenue Bond Ratings at 'A+'; Outlook Stable

Fitch Ratings - New York - 09 Jun 2021: Fitch Ratings has affirmed the 'A+' ratings on approximately $132 million limited pledge revenue bonds issued by FSU Financial Assistance, Inc. (FSUFA).

Boosters generates considerable support from various revenue streams, including concessions, conference facility revenues and license fee revenues. Overall fiscal 2020 contributions accounted for approximately $42 million (61% of total operating revenues), followed by $33 million in annual program support contributions. Fiscal 2021 will be pressured by the pandemic, with decreases expected in all contribution types (annual, restricted, capital projects and endowments), as well as in charges for services. Expectations are for some recovery in a normalized fiscal 2022 as pandemic conditions abate.



FSU cuts athletic department budget 20%


Florida State’s athletic department generated $198.4 million in total revenue, according to the latest information provided by the U.S. Department of Education’s Equity in Athletics database, but the Seminoles have been debt heavy.

The department had $201.9 million in athletics-related debt in 2018, according to a Knight Commission database.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

FSU @JimMoranCollege of Entrepreneurship vaulted 21 spots to No. 19 nationally

 


Friday, November 12, 2021

Latest world ranking of universities

 

U.S. News Best Global Universities

Latest world ranking of universities

ACC university rankings:
23. Duke
39. UNC
42. Pitt
58. GT
110. UVA
223. FSU
227. NCSU
241. Miami
250. VT
284. ND
383. Syracuse
425. Wake
577. Louisville
625. BC
689. Clemson

According to the world ranking, which is research focused, here's the top 100 US schools:

1 Harvard
2 MIT
3 Stanford
4 Cal
5 Columbia
6 Washington
7 Cal Tech
7 Johns Hopkins
9 UCSF
10 Yale
11 Penn
12 UCLA
13 Chicago
14 Princeton
15 Michigan
16 UCSD
17 Cornell
18 Duke
19 Northwestern
20 NYU
21 Washington Univ St Louis
22 North Carolina
23 Pitt
24 Texas
25 Ohio State
25 Wisconsin
27 Minnesota
28 Icahn School of Med at Mount Sinai
29 Georgia Tech
30 Maryland
31 Colorado
32 Boston University
33 UC Davis
33 UC Santa Barbara
35 USC
36 Illinois
37 Vanderbilt
38 Emory
39 Penn State
40 UC Irvine
41 Rockefeller Univ
42 Arizona
42 Florida
44 Carnegie Mellon
45 UC Santa Cruz
46 Michigan State
47 Virginia
48 Brown
49 UT- Southwestern Med
50 Purdue
51 Rutgers
52 Baylor College of Medicine
53 Texas A&M
54 Indiana
55 Case Western
56 UAB
57 UMass
58 Oregon Heath Sci Univ
58 Utah
60 Rochester
61 Arizona State
62 Rice
63 UC Riverside
64 Iowa
65 Northeastern
65 Colorado-Anschutz Med
67 Cincinnati
68 Sony Brook SUNY
69 Tufts
70 Tennessee
71 Florida State
72 North Carolina State
72 Illinois-Chicago
74 Iowa State
75 Miami, FL
76 Oregon
77 Dartmouth
77 George Washington
79 Virginia Tech
79 Yeshiva
81 Colorado State
81 Maryland-Baltimore
81 UT Health Sci Houston
84 Buffalo SUNY
84 Kansas
86 Notre Dame
87 New Mexico
88 Oregon State
89 South Florida
90 Washington State
91 Temple
91 Georgia
93 UT Dallas
94 Georgetown
95 Brandeis
96 UConn
97 South Carolina
98 Albany SUNY
99 Delaware
100 Kentucky


ARWU is also research output oriented and they have the ACC as:

29 - UNC
32 - Duke (This might be the huge grant they had to pay back starting to show up)
41-56 - GT and Pitt
56-62 - UVa
63-89 - NC State, VT, FSU, and Miami
90-110 - ND
111-129 - WF and BC
153-168 - Clemson and Syracuse
169-179 - Louisville

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Every helmet worn by FSU

 

http://www.nationalchamps.net/Helmet_Project/acc1.htm


FLORIDA STATE




Most of the following information as to the dates of use of these various FSU helmets is summarized from information found at the "Helmet Hut" web site (www.helmethut.com).

The one "missing" helmet design is the one used by FSU during its first two games in 1969 (vs Wichita State and vs Miami (FL)); during these two games, FSU used gold helmets with a version of the "100" logo that many teams used that year to commemorate the college football centennial. I have seen no color photographs of this helmet, but the "Helmet Hut" web site reports that the football-shape was blue in color. I would appreciate any color photographs from the game.

*1 In 1962, plain gold helmets were used only during the first two games (vs The Citadel and Kentucky).

*2 Beginning with the team's third game in 1962, FSU introduced a triple helmet design scheme. On their helmets the offensive unit wore an arrow logo, the defensive unit a tomahawk, and the multi-purpose players an "indian head". This scheme was in place until the end of the 1962 season.

*3 While this design was apparently in use for most of the 1964 season, the team used plain gold helmets (like the first helmet shown above) during at least the game against Georgia in 1964.

*4 This design was used only during the inaugural Peach Bowl game in Atlanta, GA, which was a 31-27 loss to LSU.

*5 This design was used during games against Texas Tech and Utah State at the beginning of the 1975 season.

*6 Used during one game only - a 10-6 loss to Iowa State.

*7 I have only one photograph - showing only one FSU helmet - from the 1975 FSU game against Memphis State; in this photograph, the FSU helmet lacks any stripes. I would appreciate additional photographs from this game to confirm whether or not the entire team was using stripeless helmets during this game - if so, this would "count" as an additional historical helmet design for FSU.

*8 Black helmets were worn during the 2009 home game against Maryland in order to "[pay] tribute to Osceola, the legendary Native American warrior whose leadership of the Seminoles during the Second Seminole War has made him an enduring symbol of the unconquered spirit that Florida State athletes seek to embody".



1960? - 1962 (1st two games);
1963; 1964 (some games)
19621962
*see note 1 below*see note 2 below*see note 2 below
196219641965
*see note 2 below*see note 3 below
1966 - 1968December 30, 1968September 20, 1969;
September 28, 1969
*see note 4 below
1969 (last eight games)19701971 - 1974
1975 (first two games)September 27, 19751975 (last eight games)
*see note 5 below*see note 6 below*see note 7 below
November 21, 20091976 - 2013November 21, 2015;
September 3, 2018
*see note 8 below

2014 -

Recruiting budgets Top 10

 




Thursday, November 4, 2021

Paul Dirac article