Just when you thought it was over...
http://www.wacotrib.com/news/higher...cle_d6017176-142e-582d-a3bd-98c4a8e46e02.html
http://www.wacotrib.com/news/higher...cle_d6017176-142e-582d-a3bd-98c4a8e46e02.html
For real. Way past due to kick them out and add one of the usual suspects.**** Baylor.
For real. Way past due to kick them out and add one of the usual suspects.
Well. the conference vetted x number of programs and imo ANY of them are better than Rapelor. That place is rotten to the core, not just football. UH would do just fine.Houston has a much higher ceiling.
To be fair we don't know what questions were asked and what other things he said were not sensational enough to print. He might have been asked about concern for the victims and it was not reported or he might not have been asked at all. The first rules of being deposed are you answer the question asked, you don't volunteer anything that wasn't asked and you keep your answer short and concise. I'm not going to crucify him for what was reported he said in a deposition - it is a sound bite; a sound bite from a venue that isn't conducive to expressing your feelings or telling your whole story.So this guy is trying to make himself out to be a martyr. His poor football program took the blame when the rapes had really been taking place all over the university for a lot longer.
Yeah, that's much better.
"Sure, we murdered some people, but, ya know, people have been getting murdered around here for a long time now."
His quote about the problems tells me all I need to know about him:
“It’s bad for business … It’s bad for Baylor’s brand, bad for admission, bad for tuition revenue,” McCaw allegedly said of the board’s motivations about the scandal. “And obviously you know Baylor is heavily reliant – it does not have a large endowment, so it’s heavily reliant on tuition revenue. So if there’s a dip in admissions, a dip in tuition revenue, that severely affects the university.”
How about, it's bad for the ******* women that were raped, you dickhead?
Personally, I'd take Houston over BU in a nanosecond. But that would take a set of nuts; this conference's leadership has none.
Personally, I'd take Houston over BU in a nanosecond. But that would take a set of nuts; this conference's leadership has none.
There are alot of schools I'd take over Baylor, and Houston is not one of them. If the conference wants to keep increasing it's digital footprint and stay ahead of the game, Houston does nothing to help.Personally, I'd take Houston over BU in a nanosecond. But that would take a set of nuts; this conference's leadership has none.
Houston has a population of 2.3 million. If just 1% are sports fans that’s 23,000 people/viewers. If you pitch a digital subscription of $9.99 per month that adds $2.7 million per year- and that’s just 1% of the population. Houston had around 100-200K viewers during ACC play, but had 3.8 million viewers against Texas Tech last year. Even if you skew on the low side and think Houston can only bring 100,000 Big 12 viewers a month, that’s just shy of $1 million per month for a $9.99 streaming service. If Houston can come close to replicating the viewership numbers they had against Texas Tech then its a slam dunk decision to add them to the conference. No other market can guarantee the demand for college football and quantity of viewers.There are alot of schools I'd take over Baylor, and Houston is not one of them. If the conference wants to keep increasing it's digital footprint and stay ahead of the game, Houston does nothing to help.
My point is, other schools out there can do much better. Their overall fanbase is pretty small.Houston has a population of 2.3 million. If just 1% are sports fans that’s 23,000 people/viewers. If you pitch a digital subscription of $9.99 per month that adds $2.7 million per year- and that’s just 1% of the population. Houston had around 100-200K viewers during ACC play, but had 3.8 million viewers against Texas Tech last year. Even if you skew on the low side and think Houston can only bring 100,000 Big 12 viewers a month, that’s just shy of $1 million per month for a $9.99 streaming service. If Houston can come close to replicating the viewership numbers they had against Texas Tech then its a slam dunk decision to add them to the conference. No other market can guarantee the demand for college football and quantity of viewers.
All that being said, I don’t think the conference can kick Baylor out - as much as they deserve it.
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/college-football-tv-ratings/