Saturday, April 27, 2019

Seminole Boosters & Women's Athletics





Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Which programs best develop elite prospects?



https://247sports.com/college/florida-state/Article/College-football-development-Top247-2019-NFL-Draft-Alabama-Clemson-Florida-131413816/






Recruiting is college football’s lifeblood.
Excuse the cliché. There just isn’t a more succinct way to describe it. From now until robots or androids become the gladiators of choice, college football will be defined by the ability acquire and cultivate talent: Every national title game participant since 2002 featured at least one five-star prospect on its roster.
Development, the labor of transforming talent to production, is what closes the gap between those with recruiting riches and those without. It can also serve as a wedge that separates powerhouses from everyone else.
Those teams have their moments, but all of them (perhaps with the exception of Oklahoma) had severe swoons in play. The teams best protected against that like Florida State, Georgia and Notre Dame had the recruiting base – 30-plus Top247 players – to endure some busts. Even then, each experienced at least one season with eight or fewer wins within the last three years. In the Sooners’ case, landing a pair of transcendent transfer quarterbacks (and a potentially a coach) can make up for a lot.

247Sports examined the first five years of Top247 data in order to determine how top programs nationally have developed four and five-star players. Those classes, 2010-14, span a full spectrum of eligibility across a five-year period. There are some holdouts from the 2014 class (fifth-year seniors). For the most part, however, the 1,235 prospects have exhausted their eligibility or filtered out of college football.
To fairly access a successful development, 247Sports created a “Development Rating.” It's a measure that takes into account the total number of Top247 prospects a program had along with where/if those players were drafted (3 points for 1st rounders, 2 points for 2nd-3rd, 1 for 4th-7th), dividing the total number of prospects by the point total to create the rating. This removes any advantage created by a program’s ability to recruit an overwhelming number of Top247 players. It also rewards programs that produce more first- and second-day picks. The NFL often will draft late-round fliers on talent alone – think Kahlil McKenzie in the sixth round last year.
To more accurately represent how a program develops players, 247Sports removed four categories of prospects from the data: 1. Players who were dismissed. 2. Players who didn’t qualify. 3. Players who medically retired. 4. Players who transferred after two or fewer seasons on campus. If a player stayed three years and transferred, they count against a team’s 'not drafted' tab. If a player transferred and was drafted elsewhere, they count for the team to which they transferred. 
Lastly, Top247 players don’t fully speak to a program’s ability to develop. The more impressive examples are often when teams find undervalued talent and shape it into NFL potential. That’s why schools like TCU, Wisconsin and Boise State have found outsized success since 2000. Yet, as we annually salivate over four and five-star prospects, this study is meant to spotlight the programs that do the most with those players.


Even considering those outside factors, the differences between schools like North Carolina (36.4 percent of 11 Top247 prospects drafted) and Florida State (50 percent of 36 Top247 players drafted) are clear. There’s a reason the Seminoles have six 10-win seasons this decade while the Tar Heels claim just one.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Party School Rankings

Nice find by ACC Football RX.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/04/2019-party-schools.html

Top Ten U.S. party schools in 2019, according to Niche:

1. Tulane University (New Orleans, LA)
2. University of Georgia (Athens, GA)
3. West Virginia University (Morgantown, WV)
4. University of Wisconsin (Madison, WI)
5. Howard University (Washington, D.C.)
6. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (Champaign, IL)
7. Indiana University - Bloomington (Bloomington, IN)
8. The University of Alabama (Tuscaloosa, AL)
9. Florida State University (Tallahassee, FL)
10. University of Texas-Austin (Austin, TX)

State sides with free speech

Great move by all state universities.

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2019/04/15/desantis-fsu-stop-universities-shouldnt-shield-students-free-speech/3471422002/

Gov. Ron DeSantis and Florida higher education leaders Monday wholeheartedly endorsed President Donald Trump’s recent executive order for universities to uphold all forms of free speech on campus.

“The idea that you get free speech in only one zone and that you have other safe spaces where you are not ever going to have to contend with an idea that you disagree with, that is something I reject," DeSantis said. "The role of the university is not to shield students from speech that makes them uncomfortable."

Last week, DeSantis asked all Florida university presidents to sign a resolution that they would not “stifle the dissemination of any idea” even when others find that speech to be abhorrent.
Each of the 12 state university system presidents have signed the document in response to the governor’s call, according to the News Service of Florida.
President Trump signed the earlier Executive Order titled “Improving Free Inquiry, Transparency, and Accountability at Colleges and Universities” in March. The executive order itself merely requires universities and colleges to certify that they are enforcing free speech standards to receive grants from 12 agencies including the the departments of Education, Health and Human Services and Defense, according to Inside Higher Education. 

DeSantis said there was no room on campuses for a heckler to be allowed to “scream down a speaker or shout down a speaker so they cannot articulate views.”
“Also, you’ve seen the trend (at some universities) of disinviting speakers once there was a student who opposed a speaker’s invitation," he added. "I think that’s a sign of weakness on behalf of school administrators and I think it demonstrates a lack of commitment to the free exchange of ideas.”
Florida, along with eight other states, prohibits free speech zones. The Legislature last year approved a “Campus Free Expression Act" that supporters said rescinded “egregious policies of censorship.”

More evidence the ACC is 3rd in TV ratings

Nice find by ACC Football RX.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2018/04/2017-average-tv-ratings-by-conference.html


2017 Conference Games
ConfM/gameavg viewers/game (100k each)
SEC3.723=====================================
B1G3.277=================================
ACC2.346=======================:
XII1.694=================
Pac1.516===============
2017 TV Contract Games
ConfM/gameavg viewers/game (100k each)
SEC3.241================================:
B1G3.004==============================
ACC2.371========================
Pac1.602================
XII1.529===============
2017 All Games
ConfM/gameavg viewers/game (100k each)
SEC3.217================================
B1G2.868=============================:
ACC2.329=======================
XII1.695=================
Pac1.616================


CONCLUSION: ACC TV viewers were a solid 3rd in all 3 categories, and actually a little closer to 2nd than they are to 4th. This really underscores just how underpaid the ACC is in terms of TV money. On the other hand, the Big Ten might be slightly overpaid.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

FSU COM generated $26.8 million in new grants in 2018



The good news is that the FSU COM generated $26.8 million in new grants in 2018, which is nearly twice as much as it did 2016.

https://view.joomag.com/fsu-college...college-of-medicine/0127534001552400229?short

The 25 schools that make the most money in college sports

Old report, but just noting anyway.

https://www.businessinsider.com/schools-most-revenue-college-sports-2016-10#14-kentucky--1165-million-12

13. Florida State — $120.8 million

13. Florida State  — $120.8 millionMike Ehrmann/Getty Images
1-year change: +15.3%
5-year change: +62.4%
Donations: $25.3 million
Licensing/Rights fees: $49.6 million
3-year avg. football revenue: $56.9 million
3-year avg. men's basketball revenue: $10.2 million
3-year avg. women's basketball revenue: $3.8 million

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Does the ACC have a wise investing strategy? Or is it stuck in the past?

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/ reviews a regular topic on this blog.  How is the ACC investing it's money?  And is it a wise strategy?



http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2019/03/acc-still-not-investing-in-football.html

http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2019/03/mens-basketball-head-coaches-average.html




https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/04/mbb-average-spending.html



How much do ACC schools spend on basketball? Is it a wise investment for them?

No mystery why the ACC is the top basketball conference...

Is anyone gaining on the ACC in terms of MBB spending per school?



Not really. All of the top conferences are up about the same $1.2M/team, give or take.

However, with TV contracts paying about 4X as much for football as they do for basketball, is this a wise investment? For ACC teams like:
  • Clemson
  • Florida State
  • Georgia Tech
  • Miami
  • Virginia Tech
I think the answer is clear: NO. Those teams all have a realistic shot at making it to a New Year's Six Bowl, if not the College Football Playoffs - but a basketball crown would be a reach for them.



BOTTOM LINE: As long as the 4 Southern-most teams, one team each from NC and VA, and the 3 Northeastern teams all place appropriate emphasis on football, I don't have a problem with the rest emphasizing basketball. Louisville has been successful in the recent past in both sports - if they can continue that pace, more power to them!

So I guess what I'm saying is this: football may be 80% of the TV contract, but it will not - nor should it be - the top sport at 80% of the ACC schools. I'm thinking more like 70% of the teams (10 out of 14) at the most for football, with the other 4 emphasizing basketball is the best mix for the ACC.

ACC Football RX: What the ACC can do, part 5 - divisions

Great review by https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/.   The best source for the ACC anywhere and it isn't close.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2012/04/what-acc-can-do-part-5-divisions.html

What the ACC can do, part 5 - divisions

When the ACC expanded to 12 teams, they had to divide them into 2 divisions.  I’m not sure what the logic was; I understand the ACC wanted competitive balance.  But there is also the matter of fan support and rivalries to consider. By looking at a minimum of 6 years of ACC attendance figures we are able to determine which opponents are the biggest draws for each team,

Thursday, April 11, 2019

FSU grad Brooks Koepka & the Masters









https://www.golfdigest.com/story/masters-2019-brandel-chamblee-questions-brooks-koepkas-toughness-leading-to-animated-golf-channel-scene



ACC Bball TV ratings

Great TV rating info from https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/04/mbb-links-news-and-rumors-41119.html


Here's a quick review of the 2018-19 college basketball season from a TV perspective...

Notice a pattern there? ACC, ACC, ACC, ACC, SEC, ACC.

In fact, I'll go a step further: Duke, Duke, Duke, Duke, Kentucky, Duke
__________

Here's another pattern for you: "For the 17th consecutive year, Louisville is the number one market for men’s college basketball..."
Top 5 TV Markets (by TV Rating)
1. Louisville (4.2)
2. Knoxville (2.9)
3. Raleigh-Durham (2.8)
4. Greensboro-High Point (2.7)
5. Kansas City (2.5)

source: ESPN MediaZone Press Release.
3 of the top 5.

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

FSU Graduation Rate




Sunday, April 7, 2019

Madison 51, FSU Booster Club



https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/great-new-booster-venue-madison-51-college-town.254536/

Went to the soft opening today. It’s for Boosters only on Madison just off Woodward. New concept bar with upscale bar food. Met the chef and manager. Food was outstanding. Really great idea with excellent execution. Not sure what level of booster can go on gameday. No membership fee. Just be a Booster. They are still working on what level you need to be. Grand opening soon. Especially great for out of towners looking for an option to a traditional tailgate.
 

This will be one of the best membership and fund-raising ideas in Booster history. I too, was there Thursday. Really well done. Great design and decor with photos of iconic FSU grads in a very nice club atmosphere on Madison Street. Major donors have and will pay for the privilage of being Founding Members. The Founding Memberships more than cover the cost of creating 51 on Madison.

But, 51 Madison will soon be THE amenity for higher level Boosters who support the program. Boosters will have a superb place to take guests when they are in Tallahassee. Any guest will be impressed.
 
seminolesam, Yesterday at 8:20 PM 
Last edited: Yesterday at 8:28 PM

Unlike the Champions Club, there is no cost to join and you are allowed to bring guests. But you have to be a booster. The managers have flexibility to lower the booster contribution level for entry depending on the demand...and can even have special days where anyone can go in order to encourage new booster membership. If the boosters want to open the venue to everyone for those time periods where it's slow in Tallahassee, they have total flexibility to do that.

It's a great...but not large...venue. There is an inside bar and a outside patio...all with a roof over your head. You are surrounded by other venues...like Madison Social...where you can see all the other FSU fans having a good time. So although it is "private" for boosters, it has a very open view of the entire College Town scene.

Food is definitely a focus of this venue, and this place can be particularly useful for out of town boosters that are unable to make tailgating plans.
 

Its between Township and Tin Lizzies
 


Friday, April 5, 2019

Eglin AFB partnering with FAMU-FSU College of Engineering



https://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/20190401/eglin-afb-partnering-with-famu-fsu-college-of-engineering

The FAMU-FSU College of Engineering and researchers and engineers from Eglin Air Force Base recently celebrated the beginning of a new partnership Monday to train undergraduate students in areas critical to the U.S. Air Force, according to a news release from Florida A&M University.
According to the release, the Air Force Research Laboratory at Eglin will fund a $400,000 grant to create the Air Force Research Laboratory Scholars program at the College of Engineering. The program will bring students into the lab environment where they can directly benefit from working with faculty researchers on Air Force-related research.
“This is a great partnership from our standpoint because it provides unique research opportunities for our students and faculty,” Murray Gibson, dean of the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, said in the news release. “We are delighted that AFRL recognizes the value of our unique shared college as a source of highly trained and diverse engineers.”
While the AFRL has supported research at the college in the past, it will now expand research and training opportunities for students at two unique FSU centers that house several engineering faculty members.
The Florida Center for Advanced Aero-Propulsion includes polysonic wind tunnel facilities that are critical to new research for aircraft technology. The High-Performance Materials Institute allows faculty to experiment with high-tech, next-generation materials that could be used in a variety of different ways.
“FAMU-FSU Engineering has a history of high-caliber faculty and students and we are looking forward to the research results from future AFRL Scholars,” Col. Garry Haase, director of the Air Force Research Lab Munitions Directorate, noted in the news release.
The five-year program will provide the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering with funding for four AFRL scholars. College of Engineering Associate Professor Rajan Kumar, along with Gibson and Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies Farrukh Alvi, will develop a tailored curriculum for these scholars that focuses on use of the polysonic wind tunnel and other facilities that support the AFRL’s research agenda.
Kumar, who will serve as the point person for the program, said the new agreement will provide students with specialized training that would prepare them for their future professional endeavors. “This program will provide maximum exposure to students across a broad spectrum of educational background,” he said in the release. “Students will conduct relevant and necessary research during an internship that focuses on the critical needs of AFRL Munitions Directorate, particularly in the areas of supersonic and hypersonic flows.”
Kumar, Gibson and Alvi participated in a ceremonial signing of the partnership with Haase and other officials from the Air Force Research Laboratory. Haase and other Air Force officials, along with aides from the offices of U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., also toured the wind tunnel facilities with FSU and FAMU administrators

2019 ACC Tournament set all-time ESPN records

Another great find by https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/



2019 ACC Tournament set all-time ESPN records.

Previously, we told you that the ACC had a record-setting Men's Basketball Tournament this year. What we didn't tell you is that the ACC Tournament provided the two most-watched games in ESPN Championship Week history! Yes, Duke-North Carolina and Florida State-Duke BOTH broke the old record for most-viewed Championship Week games on ESPN.
This year’s New York Life ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament set new records for ESPN, as the Duke-North Carolina semifinal and the Duke-Florida State championship game are now the most-viewed Champ Week games in ESPN history.
The season’s third meeting between Duke and North Carolina averaged 4,150,000 viewers, which in addition to setting a new viewership record for ESPN, was the most-viewed Champ Week game across networks this season. The previous record for most-viewed game was the 1998 ACC championship game, which averaged 4,011,000 viewers.
The championship game between Florida State-Duke matchup averaged 4,063,000 viewers, the second most-viewed Champ Week game in ESPN history, and second most-watched Champ Week game of the season across all networks.
The second semifinal, which saw Florida State facing Virginia, averaged 1,618,000 viewers, up 76 percent in comparison to last year’s game on ESPN2.
The three games averaged 3,288,000 viewers, up 17 percent from 2017, when all three matchups were played on ESPN.

2019 NCAA Units

Great find from ACC Football RX.  ACC has made a mistake if the theory is it can close revenue gaps with NCAA units.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/04/2019-ncaa-units.html

The ACC was generally believed to be the best men's basketball conference - by far - during the 2018-19 regular season. ACC games dominated TV ratings, and 3 of the 4 #1 seeds in the NCAA Tournament were ACC teams.

Yet there was a crack in the armor. The ACC only got the second most teams into the Big Dance - 7 ACC teams to 8 for the Big Ten. Now, thanks to an identical number of wins and that one team advantage, the Big Ten will edge out the ACC in terms of basketball tournament money this year...

From ESPN: Big Ten 1st in tourney money; SEC sets own high

Conf.Units$M (min.)
B1G2135.5
ACC2033.8
SEC1932.1
XII1322
PAC711.8
AAC711.8
East58.43
WCC58.43
OVC46.7



Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Ranking CFB rosters

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

No system is perfect...not even close, but shocking that FSU still has that roster, but expectations are so low....hmmmmmmmmmmmm.

https://accfootballrx.blogspot.com/2019/04/athlon-ranks-2019-fb-rosters.html


A couple of days ago, Athlon Sports ranked college football rosters for 2019 by averaging the team rankings over the last 5 years. Interesting result, just not sure if you can determine much from any ranking that places Clemson 8th during a period when the Tigers have won 2 national championships and played for a third...
Ranking College Football's Rosters for 2019
RkTeamConf1918171615AvgW/L
1AlabamaSEC171112.267-6
2GeorgiaSEC213753.652-16
3Ohio StateB1G1422475.862-7
4LSUSEC5157367.244-19
5USCPac2044827.643-23
6Florida StACC1811623845-20
7AuburnSEC11129989.841-25
8ClemsonACC1061610910.265-7
9TexasXII3326111010.633-31
10OklahomaXII698201411.454-13
11Texas A&MSEC41712181112.440-25
12Notre DameInd151011151312.844-20
13TFloridaSEC91410132113.440-23
13TTennesseeSEC12201714413.434-29
13TPenn StateB1G13515191513.445-21
16MichiganB1G821553715.243-21
17OregonPac71619281617.242-24
18MiamiACC28813212619.240-25
19S CarolinaSEC171921261920.432-32
20TOle MissSEC22313061721.235-27
20TUCLAPac441820121221.231-32
22WashingtonPac161322292721.447-21
23StanfordPac213914162422.848-19
24NebraskaB1G192223243023.632-31
25Mississippi StSEC242724311824.842-23