Ep 850 - A West Coast Perspective with Matt Zimmerman - podcast episode cover

Ep 850 - A West Coast Perspective with Matt Zimmerman

Jul 03, 202247 min
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Episode description

We've broken down the addition of USC and UCLA from a variety of perspectives, but we haven't talked about the impact of the move on the psyche and mentality of Pac 12 or west coast fans. Fortunately, we have longtime friend of the pod Matt Zimmerman --- a native Angelino and a sports expert --- who was willing to join the show and give his perspective. We talk about USC/UCLA sports culture, recruiting in SoCal, the implications of the Pac 12 becoming a shadow of its former self, and what the next moves might be (or should be) for both the Big Ten and the SEC.

Transcript

You're listening to the back home network presented by home field apparel. Welcome back to Crimson. Cascading lab. You're joining you. Once again, it is Sunday, July the 3rd of 2022. The summer is just flying by and at least for this Week, we've actually got a lot of stuff to talk about. This is normally the dead zone of sports, particularly on the

college side of things. But instead what we have is, of course, major structural realignment going on in college sports and we've done several podcasts on this already. If you haven't checked out our three podcast, that we've done already this week on it, go back and listen to those. We've got a little bit of a different flavor on this one, and I'm looking forward to having this conversation. First before we get to that, just a reminder, home-field apparel is the presenting sponsor.

The back home network and Crimson cast. And if you have not shopped at home field apparel before you can for 15% off, just use the code home, H ome. They've got some tremendous stuff at some point. I asked myself has the audience actually not gone to own field apparel yet, but I'm sure there's some of you out of you who have yet to pull the trigger. Please go do. So they drop some tremendous stuff this summer already as they've gotten into their.

Their next big new Saturday series and I'm I'm certain they'll be another one of those coming up in the fall so again home field apparel.com, go check them out. 15 percent off your first order with the code home, we've got joining us today a longtime friend of the podcast and an occasional contributor to the podcast. And a guy who is, I think very uniquely qualified to talk about what's going on with this particular set of moves in college sports.

It's Matt Zimmerman, you know, maybe is MZ on Twitter but But dr. Zimmerman Professor Mississippi State. So he teaches in the SEC but he got his Doctorate from Indiana and his undergrad. And he also has worked as a journalist in Los Angeles as a native angeleno and certainly has a lot of perspective on what's going on with the to La schools joining the Big Ten. Matt always a pleasure to talk to you under any circumstance but especially this one, how you doing?

Doing great Galen, glad to be here and glad to appear on the show with the new piano intro music. It's been a very long time. Yes. I know it's well, it's good to have you back.

And obviously we were talking about this almost immediately when the news broke, and I just like, when you heard the news break, when you heard that USC and UCLA in a very short period of time, had gone from being rumored to joining the Big Ten to actually being members of the Big Ten, What was your reaction given your obvious background in Los Angeles? I thought it was a great move for USC and UCLA.

I think it's disappointing as a Pac-12 enthusiasts because the Pac-12 is a lot, like the Big Ten, where these universities have had a relationship for a century and they're very proud of their academic and athletic combination. And so, I think USC and UCLA just saw the writing on the wall and they realized they were going to have to break it up. So that's it was a great move for them. Interesting. Move for the Big Ten.

But yeah, that was a great move for USC UCLA because you, we We both know the gaps between the Haves and have-nots and and even within that have conferences, the power 5, there's still massive Financial gaps and they're only going to get bigger. As I know, you've talked about already on couple of the podcasts. Yeah, we'll talk. There's some interesting numbers. I read in a piece from earlier today that I want to dig in with you, but I guess you hit on

something there. First that I think is important and you know, I mean, there's only so many angles, we can cover to, you know, when you hear this kind of news and certainly for us in Crimson cast land, we're kind of giddy about it because we sat around and, you know, you see, Texas and Oklahoma, go to the SEC and you're like, Hey, Big Ten, you might want to do something here, to counter the SEC, and it took a little while, but obviously they bring in probably, you

know, two of the biggest fish left in the pond but you know, it is, it is an interesting thing because you know coming from the West Coast a lot of people that aren't from the West Coast aren't from Los Angeles don't really grasp the Culture of sports out there and the fact that, you know, there is a separate pac-10 or Pac-12 culture and this idea that it's kind of its own thing that stood separate for decades from essentially the rest of college sports.

I mean, can you describe some of that and where those attitudes and what that atmosphere, you know, is and where it comes from? Well in the case of the Pac-12, obviously when you look at the list of schools that have the most national championships across the board from football to individual track to golf to beach volleyball, the top three or PAC 12 schools, Stanford USC UCLA. And there is a culture out there where they do like being separate their the Pac-12 after dark thing.

We don't mind it, they don't mind it and it's part. That's part of it where you get to see the games late night. We Get to see NFL games early, which I always used to say is an opportunity to drink your sorrows away after you watch your team lose when the LA teams, but as far as Pac-12 culture, it's like I said is very much similar to the Big Ten in terms of the academics and Athletics and the pride in that.

And that the fact that like our version of North, excuse me their version of Northwestern or Vanderbilt is really good at sports across the board in the form of Stanford. And you also have a group of schools that again, have been in an alliance per century Oh and also there's a pride in the fact that they have the most logical rivalry games, you know, everything with other in Colorado and Utah.

Now was a very logical pairing and you also have just a, I mean, every every region has its Pride, obviously, teaching the FDC. It just means more, you know, no one can ever describe to me what it is or what, more more than what like I was a towards the Baseline. This is more than such and such but I've been It's a great story. That's a, that's a hundred percent. A question you would ask by the way. That's great. Absolutely. Well, well, it men.

But then, I would say for the marketing slogan is perfect, because it just means more and it just wants you say, hell yeah, it does. And that's all you need. And so, the Pac-12, it's again, the, the combo of fan bases and schools that are huge. And there's a lot of school

pride there. And especially when you look at USC UCLA, I mean it There's a USC family as far as as far as the alums, will always be able to find jobs and, you know I guess there's a solidarity and hey, you paid sixty thousand dollars a year for college tuition. So did I and which is an easier solidarity when you're earning something like earning, a salary that doubles what you have to pay in your student loans, I guess or something.

But exactly exactly. Okay, so you and I have talked about this on and off over the Long history of our relationship. Like what are we getting in the Big Ten with these two schools in terms of culture, you described a little of the USC culture. But like I think, for those people who don't have any interest in Los Angeles, who haven't been there? It just like you, you know, USC from football, you know, UCLA

from basketball. But people don't really understand much about the culture of either School. The culture of the alumni base, Like how they perceive themselves and each other? Can you dive into that a little bit? The perception like I said, is

the usual school pride. And what I'll note here is what I keep thinking about is the fact that there's a lot of people talking about how Now by getting the Los Angeles Market, the Big Ten has New York with Rutgers Chicago with Northwestern and l.a. now with USC and UCLA. Well, as you've talked about already in these pods, New York New Jersey. Don't care about Rutgers and they've there and they're not huge on college sport. Anyway, Chicago, I know Northwestern has a thing.

Chicago's Big Ten team, but there's Probably just as many very sad. Illinois fans and Indiana fans in Chicago. Yeah, where is in Los Angeles. There's huge fan bases and huge media coverage of USC and UCLA. And then you have people who didn't even go there every Cal State Fullerton, grad or Long Beach, State grad, or Northridge grad or, or a junior college. Grab. They all want a group for USC or UCLA.

And so there's that with the and also you have these two massive University He's in a big city and you'd think they'd get lost in the local sports coverage. But for two decades, Los Angeles, did not have professional football. And so, the media got used to covering USC and UCLA as if they

were the proteins. And so when we talk about like school pride, I know that in the rest of the country, you know, it just means more and in the Big Ten we see amazing school pride from all of the alums including us. But I would argue that there's just as much for USC UCLA and For Oregon, Washington, Stanford, probably Arizona. And so there's a lot of that as well where and when we talk about West Coast culture, it's very I guess the way I would put

it is west coast culture. Is you can have a lot of money, but you still prefer to wear a t-shirt and shorts, it's still very mellow, very laid back, but they do love their football. I mean, USC, and UCLA both average, 50 60, thousand people. I mean, in those Caverns they play and it still looks like Thousand. But there's still a lot of

support for these schools. If you were to liken the USC and UCLA fanbases to existing Big Ten fan bases, what would you what would be the closest analogies? USC football is Michigan football. As far as the level of arrogance as far as the pride, excuse me, they level of Pride that was level as far as the behaving like it's their Birthright to do well and I would argue that USB probably has a better case for that than Michigan, even though both have some storied history and all that.

But yeah, that's USC USC, I'd say. The avatars Michigan and of course they both faced each other in the Rose Bowl. A number of times in terms of UCLA basketball, well I guess Indiana basketball because again Birthright to do well in the expectation.

Plus the excellent local recruiting base and the thought that all you need is the right coach and everything will be rolling once again So let's let's talk a little bit about, I guess the implications of all of this right now because you mentioned the finances earlier and there was an interesting piece that John Canzano wrote this morning on his blog and it was an interview. Look at why don't we why don't

you laugh about that, okay? Because I can I can pick it up on Jack the other day kept calling him John Kennedy's are 0. So we have a baseball coach who named named cannizzaro and well. Anyway, go ahead. Anyway, he does this interview with Bob Thompson, who is the former president of Fox Sports Network's? And he was asked, you know, what does this mean?

From a valuation perspective for the Pac-12, as they, they've lost USC and UCLA and now they're going, they're still doing their meteorites negotiation, and his estimation was the Pac-12, was going to land a deal of about a half a billion dollars per year on average, over the course of the contract, which is about what they, you know, that's kind of the prorated version of what they've currently got.

With Fox and ESPN. And his estimation was by losing the to La schools, even if you added other schools, you'd now be looking at about 300 million dollars a year, which is, you know, that's 200 million dollars less essentially and that's almost impossible to make up. So you know there's there's some things you know, obviously to think about overall but it is fascinating thinking about like how much the to La schools, you

know? Are the straw that stirs, the drink for The pac-10 / Pac-12. And you know, his estimation was essentially, when you look at not just the La Media Market, but all those other media markets in Southern California. This is likely to take all of those with them. And you're looking at, probably, you know, if it's 200 million dollars that is in essence more than like that's more value than what the individual. Big Ten schools would have necessarily even been looking at.

They were looking, I guess in this equation at about maybe 75. 80 million dollars is school. If you can add 200 million dollars and then spread that out evenly and even among 16 schools, that's a lot of juice and that's something that as you look at this, it's like wow, you know, this this really does fracture West Coast centered college sports in a way that really almost nothing else could have Absolutely.

And it's also interesting because again I that's my point earlier where like, you know, the media coverage in there. Lay of the of these two teams is huge and it will now get even bigger. Because one thing that when people scoff about this expansion, with the Big Ten when they said Well, the West Coast that makes no sense.

Actually makes perfect sense because anyone who follows the conference's, understands that no conferences, alums scatter like the big tent, I mean, in the Pac-12, they stay well West. Yes, you see, they tend to stay in the south of the Big Ten. I mean, I always say, once you experience the midwest winter, you want to get the hell out of there and you, huh? So you scattered they're everywhere.

And so there are plenty of West Coast, Big Ten fans were all over this and so and so it's not as weird to move there. And so with them, when you throw in the money and you throw in, you know, how much money the Big Ten is always brought in. I mean, remember a decade ago when the big Ten's to go, we're exploring expansion that made everybody freak.

The heck out in a way that they hadn't seven years before, when the ACC started raiding, the Big East and so like Missouri's, Governor begged for them to get a spot in the Big Ten and so on, and the Big Ten ended up just wanting a Braska, but it still caused everybody. Cause a lot of ripples to happen and why because that's Big Ten Network.

Everybody wants their money and everybody wanted to even monetary distribution and I think that's an underrated part of this is we watch the big 12 fall apart during what I like to call. I forget where I stole this from conference Armageddon decade ago and now we have actual conference Armageddon. We didn't get the pack 16 and big 16. And if you see we succeeded ACC. We 16 like we all got a decade ago, but now we're getting that Armageddon. And why?

Because the money is so huge. And I think the Big Ten also was not just forward-thinking with the network but was also forward-thinking with the even monetary distribution. Something that the Big 12 is, we know didn't happen, it is still wild to think about, you know, Larry Scott It had Texas, Oklahoma Oklahoma State and Texas Tech ready to join the Pac-12 and I guess the presidents and athletic directors voted that down this was what in 2010 or 2011.

I mean it's yeah that's a hard one to get your head wrapped around but the there's so many you almost can't chart. An alternate history forward with that, being the reality because it just changes so much of the, the current equation. I mean, some of this, it's You know what was that? Just would have been just a bad cultural fit and it wouldn't

have worked or was that? I mean, Larry Scott gets blamed for a lot of things but that really feels like shortsightedness on the part of the entirety of the conference at that point. Well and and somewhere in the Multiverse, Larry Scott goes down in history as one of the most effective commissioners of our lifetimes. If that happens, right? And he's not right, quite Jim Delaney. But that's incredible that he actually had that deal in place and now everyone looks like

Larry Scott as wow. That guy was A real disaster and all the things he did. I think you exact talked about it the other day, but how do you pulled off that move regarding cultural fits? I think the Big Ten got lucky with this particular move with you, as seen UCLA's cultural fit as far as academics and Athletics, but not everybody's a cultural fit. I mean, you know, there's still can Diego State fans and media. All over Twitter saying the cartels gonna invite us next, right?

I mean, some things are just, not cultural say that. That is a bad, bad Cola. Consolation prize, if you're the pac-10 at this, Well, if it's, you know, but the cultural fit is interesting because you look up and down the rest of the team's, it's not like we're in a different era now and I think this has been a tough thing, you study this stuff. You mean you've done plenty of research on it.

This is a tough thing for people to understand because it feels like you know when the first round of expansion started to happen in in the mid-2000s it was. As you mentioned, the ACC rating, the Big East, they get Miami, Virginia Tech Boston College and that is all about the ACC wants to be a major player. Layer. And to be a major player, you have to have football Brands as opposed to just a basketball presence and they get at the time.

Miami, who was one of the preeminent, if not the preeminent brand in college football then, you know? So everybody gets they get finally conditioned to that. And then the next round of expansion seven or eight years later is really about television markets because it's all about cable. Well now this expansion is not

really about that. It's really more about Revenue generation, which isn't while it's Tied somewhat to TV, it's not directly connected to TV anymore in the same way and this is the problem for the other Pac-12 schools who might be looking to get in the life raft. You know, if you look at and this was in that this that comes out of article. I mentioned earlier, you know, Oregon and Washington on there, on the surface. Might look like good fits, you know, their National Brands and so forth.

But do they bring enough to the table Revenue wise? Eyes and they probably don't. And you look across the spectrum of the rest of the Pac-12 and the schools that are still there and it's like it. None of you really move the

needle at this point. It's tough for people to get their heads wrapped around it. Similar to what happened in the Big 12 where once, Texas and Oklahoma are gone, not only do you have to schools that were taking the bulk of the money and in the first place, but you have the only two schools that the

move, the needle there. Now, I'm not saying that the Pac-12 has a bunch of Iowa State's and Kansas State, but they Of a bunch of Oklahoma State's and that's the might be a little harsh, but yeah, Washington, Washington and Oregon. Move the needle. As far as another move, I don't know. I'm guessing they're both on the phone with each other and on the phone with says, the Big Ten kind of asking for some love, I mean there's a pact will try to merge with the big 12.

One thing, I keep thinking about is what if, what does the Big Ten do next? What moves the needle for the Big Ten, like everyone keeps talking about Notre Dame. What if they call Notre Dame and say? We can get Stanford, then does Notre Dame join because then they can do that academic Prestige selling point and all that do their Duty even bother like I think Stanford Notre Dame might be the pair that the Big Ten should go for.

Yeah, I don't know. I mean a lot of it there's so many factors that are hard to get your head wrapped around and I think you're right. Obviously Notre Dame is probably the last piece financially that would absolutely move the needle and yeah you know I I'm curious what Notre Dame's thought process his here because they've been proudly independent for so

long. And you know, they might still want to do that, but the financial realities now are much different than they were even 10 years ago, but there's also the financial realities on the other side.

I mean, in order Dame coming wouldn't just be well, here's an order Dame's Revenue, it's also like, well, if you bring Notre Dame in, does NBC say hey, we'll pay 200 million dollars for that package and then that goes into the Big Ten and yes in order To aim, you know, wouldn't be keeping all of that money themselves but they would suddenly have access to maybe double or triple the amount of money that they could have

gotten not just on their own. But if they join a different conference that doesn't have that that group of Brands and you know, there's not really any other place for them to go at this point. So you know, it's like they're not going to join the SEC. I've seen that tossed around a bunch like Notre Dame in the SEC would be. I don't even have a good analogy.

That's how bad that Is and in the ACC is kind of in the same boat right now is the Big 12 and the remnants of the Pac-12, which is that ultimately in this current game, someone has to be willing to give you money in exchange for the game inventory, that you're generating and you just saw like if 200 million dollars went away from the Pac-12, just with two schools leaving and that essentially represents 40% of what they

could possibly earn. They're not going to bring that back by bringing other schools in and even an order Dame in the wild scenario would be like. Yeah, maybe we'll join the Pac-12 remnants. It's like why would you do that? There's, there's no Financial purpose to it. I would compare the, Pac-12, current situation and previous situation. Really? Because once they grab Colorado, and Utah, there were, they weren't going to get Boise State.

Like there are no more logical somewhat Regional Schools for them to grab but I would compare it to the Big 12. I mean they lost Colorado, Missouri, Texas A&M and Nebraska they lost you know for strong. State schools, of course, Flagship schools of their state or am sort of the other Flagship school. And they added TCU and West, Virginia, that's not an upgrade even if you're a Mountaineers

fan, that's true. Yeah, that's what West Virginia really is at this point, kind of the most culturally, like, disconnected from their conference. That that really is a marriage of convenience more than anything else. Well, well, I was just going to say and what's funny about that And that. And that reminds me of with the travel, reminds me of how some are saying, we're USC, and UCLA all that travel. And it said, well, USC, and UCLA can afford to send their girls

car. Excuse me, women's cross country team to Columbus, Ohio on a chartered flight. Yeah, there will be okay. And also with the travel may acquaint, you with Conference USA, right? Which is conference, Cornucopia, none of those schools have the kind of money. These big 10 schools have and yet they're traveling Insanity. Well, and even, I mean, I gotta say that the Whole thing has been really overblown, this already happens this travel, as you just mentioned, it's already

taking place. And if you, if you work in a college environment as both of us do and you you know you've got athlete's not just in football and basketball but you've got to athletes in volleyball and water, polo and baseball and softball who are already all over the country. They're flying everywhere. Now that a little bit of that got pulled back from covid, be just because Revenues went down, but the moment, things went back to normal all that came back as well. So yeah.

But the argument that somehow the travel thing is a big issue, especially, for these two schools, which are you do have one of the like five biggest airports in the United States sitting there within what 45 minutes of each campus maybe with traffic an hour. But it's like hitting on traffic, but it's but it just it does feel like that is a bit of a red herring. I mean, But let me ask you this if you know travel not being that big of a deal.

Do you see any potential problems or pitfalls here? That we need to be keeping an eye on with this expansion. Leaving everything else off the table. Well, just to go quickly to the one that some people are trying to say. Even though this has nothing to do with college expansion at all, some are worried about the

academics for these athletes. But you mentioned with covid, another executive covid-19 slot of people, a lot of students And a lot of schools got used to having a lot of online courses, so a lot of these student athletes are going to be travel a lot. They'll just have online courses. Are they going to request? I'm just this will all be handled like. There's not going to be something, they're not going to ask me to be in class, you know, five days a week or anything

like that. This will all be figured out on that level you asked about pitfalls, right? Yep, potential pitfalls. I don't know that you're the travel will be lengthy, but at the same time, I mean, big West schools fly to Hawaii to play volleyball and so I as far as pitfalls, I don't see any for a u.s. you UCLA. I don't see any for the Big Ten to be honest.

Because now, the Big Ten is throwing the gauntlet down in the face of the SEC and said, you know, we'll see your Texas and Oklahoma and raise you Los Angeles market. So, we'll see what happens there. I mean I Don't I mean there'll be some pitfalls like for instance some certain sports that certain teams that got used to dominating, the Pac-12 aren't going to be able to dominate The Big Ten and there will be certain teams that got used to dominating. You know.

Maybe like there's a tennis team or a soccer team, got used to dominating the Big Ten and now they have you I think UCLA coming in and maybe they're not going to dominate this much like you know, are you start? Well, I use markers and consistently dominant as it had been but now UCLA's coming in. I mean, And do the pitfalls at the same time as you any pitfalls, outweigh the benefits. I mean, I mentioned UCLA.

Now, UCLA in Indiana might have had hard times in more recent years but this is still two of the top six historical College, men's college basketball programs of all time. USC's one of the top five or six college football programs of all time. I mean the benefits for this greatly outweigh the pitfalls. I mean what patrols do you see?

Well I mean I don't see a whole lot and you know a lot of people have raised the The banner of oh well it just won't feel the same to have these teams playing each other and not have these traditional rivalries. Then that is something I'm curious about with with the LA schools. I mean, USC versus UCLA is one that we know about is there a lot of Romanticism about, like, you know, weekend trips to Corvallis in the Pac-12 that I'm not aware of?

Well, the other example I was going to use was everyone's going to miss that hot USC, Arizona, football match up or that or that. How'd you know, UCLA Washington, State, basketball match up. No, I they won't be missed as long as they brought each other and even if there might be some fans who say they're missed or some fans of other programs, you say the rivalries and Miss, you're seeing UCLA had to make

this move. I mean they had to be proactive and make this kind of move to preserve their future as clean as to continue being. Great college, sports programs and I know that's been a goal because, you know, academics are important and all that other stuff which they are obviously. In our world. But these moves have nothing to do with that. They have to do with financial success in athletics, and USC, and UCLA had to do this.

I'm sure there'll be some us defense were like, well, we miss playing Stanford, but one thing I saw was one college sports pundit. I forget who on Twitter was saying, man. The USC fan, or the USC and UCLA friends going to miss out on this great Pac-12 road trips. You know, the organ and, and Arizona. And it's like, dude, they just they just moved up to the varsity College. All road trips. They're going to Happy Valley now, they're going to Columbus.

Now, they're going to Ann Arbor. Now, they'll be okay. You know, that, you know, it's like, it's been like that with some of the big Ted stuff. It's like, you know, yes, I think you could make the argument against, okay, why did we add Rutgers? But, you know, adding it adding Maryland for from, for basketball both men's and women's basketball or soccer adding Nebraska for football, even though that's not a great football program, that's still a

great road trip. Going to Lincoln That's a really special and unique home environment. It is it's like it things haven't gotten worse and it'll be different. But I don't think that that automatically means it's going to be bad and that's going to be an interesting thing to watch. Couple more questions for you.

One you like Raina did want to please wait for a good having been to a couple Rose Bowls and even before I attended I you I always chuckled about how the fans of Ohio State at the second one. I went to in Penn State, the first one word Just walking around, like, like Harry Potter. The first time he goes to Diagon Alley in the first, we were just out of. I may have just lost half our listeners but he's looking up and he's constantly like, oh my God. This is most amazing thing ever.

Like they're they're they're they're traveling to the Rose Bowl and saying my God, January 1st, and I'm not wearing a parka. This is amazing. And now they'll get to have that experience a couple times a year going to USC and UCLA. So, so that's another thing is like, the travel there. I would argue that, there's, there's not going to be single person. Whose lives in Detroit. Who's a huge Michigan fan? Who's like Carla La in November? Why would I do that?

They'll be like man, when so scheduling a circle that on the calendar. So please go ahead, I'm sorry. No, it's fine. You obviously, were you were a journalist in, Southern California, you covered High School sports, you followed along with college teams out

there. I think people forget sometimes how fertile the recruiting grounds are in Southern California and how many sports There are I was just out in Hermosa Beach for a few days and you know what, we're walking along the Strand, my wife and I are and you know, she was kind of stunned at how many people just play volleyball there all the time? You know, they're out there at like 8:00 a.m. on a Saturday morning and they're there for like seven eight hours if not longer.

So like, how much does this? Let Big Ten teams maybe into that recruiting Bit more, does that open up the Big Ten schools as a potential landing spot for a lot of these athletes? In Southern California, potentially, we see it already to some degree with like water polo where Indiana is in a conference that is essentially all California teams. You know how how much of a benefit might this be for particularly Olympic sports at places like Indiana and other

big 10 schools. Well, let me rewind a little bit and just say, I know people who have like normal person careers, you know, making six figures and all that out there, who their lunch break is they go to the beach and play volleyball for an hour or two acceptance. And some, frankly, like this sign sign me up for that lifestyle, because I do people wake up at 5 a.m. 5 days a week. So, it's a different lifestyle.

Now, as far as Big Ten schools being able to recruit out there, absolutely like La kids don't necessarily always say They did USC would be a Powerhouse every year. I'm going to get highly recruiting classes but for instance, when an organ is really good, it's because they're snatching kids out of the Los Angeles Market.

If you look at their rosters and I would argue that, I mean like we visit Tuscaloosa, it's 90 minutes from here and we go because it has a water burger and a safe, the simple things in life. But I've seen people there do today with the Oh California place and I'll say you know, where you from is like San Bernardino or something and it It's football players. And so I think you have a great

football program. I mean, 10 years ago, I thought that the Big Ten might suffer because a lot of people would, a lot of recruits would want to live in the snowy areas, but I realized that was just me projecting. And so in actuality, I think Michigan, Ohio, State etcetera will get will get more, California recruits. And as you pointed out to, I think Scott the other day mates that failed as a California court for Indiana.

So yeah, I think with this kind of footprint out there because now instead of a pact Oh versus Big Ten and which ones better thing among La Media. Now you know they've joined the Empire that is the Big Ten and so you'll see a lot more positive coverage and a lot more of you know, talking about, you know, these USC fans just want in their first road trip to Ann Arbor and they have a lot of great things to say music 11. And so you NE see a lot of that going on.

And I think they're recruiting, I mean, you know, I'm going to have a bunch of California kids like walk out there but I think that now with recruiting The world is so much smaller because of cable and streaming TV and the internet moving, you know, 1,800 miles away from home. Even if home Southern California is not that for another thing. I don't think and especially with n IL, you know, USC and UCLA can't get every single

recruit. I mean I covered Long Beach State for a while which the big West you talk about. You know, you'll never see a big whack team in the volleyball title again with all this or the baseball title or anything. But even there like some of those athletes, they went through their we're Like, well, you know, they didn't have good enough grades because the USC or UCLA or whatever and there's

some really good athletes there. I mean, if you talk about the high schools out there, the area we covered in the largest, The Long Beach area, we had 50 some high schools and we were so good. Kids were getting badminton scholarships. That's How Deep The Sports were, who's giving badminton scholarships. I'm curious, Baird, where they were, what happened was there were kids who are like in the national team pool. Uh-huh. And so schools.

We're giving of like a cute as the coach that the calling in an academic scholarship, but it's because they want to wear them there to play, badminton is the Lori, Loughlin Memorial badminton scholarship, like what your kids are actually good and I think we're good. Okay, last question for you big picture so it feels from a like a tactical perspective that the SEC has really decided we're going to double down on football. Football is going to be the

thing that we try to own. And we don't care, if we are contained in a relatively small, geographical region, in the United States, whereas the Big Ten with this move, has basically said, we are the National brand. We are essentially, you know, not just the NFL Junior, but we're kind of like the the second tier, like the college basketball league that you can find something basically wherever you are in the u.s. except for the Deep South, which of those. Strategies.

Do you think ends up having more success down the road? And, you know, I guess for either conference what would be your ideal next move? I think the Big Ten strategy is appropriate for who the Big Ten is. As we talked about earlier, they're alumnus scatter across the country and the Big Ten Network was in every home from coast to coast sea to shining sea.

I mean I go home to visit my parents and immediately turn on Big Ten Network just cause I can and you they don't have SEC network on their, on their cable package, for instance. But Big Ten Network came as part of their basic sports package.

So the big ten hours Argue that grabbing USC and UCLA as part of its Manifest Destiny. Now, if they wanted to try to connect the state to get the kid, what is Nebraska's connected to Colorado and then they could grab Arizona, I don't think they're interested in any of that anymore. So I think there's a long-term strategy. There is huge because the SEC all of their expansion has made

sense geographically. And so when you grab texas-oklahoma that still makes total sense for the SEC in many ways as far as what sports they're strong in and as far as athletic culture and academic culture and all that and it's going to be fun. Watching Texas, finished fourth in its division. Every year football in the SEC. As a lot of fans are already saying down here, but I think that I think of both have a strategy that is endemic to

them. Like as you say Notre Dame isn't going to join the SEC and like the CeCe is going to be like in the SEC is not going to snatch a Syracuse or Pittsburgh and, you know, they're not going to go completely out of their region. There's and then I'm going to grab Washington Oregon, the Big Ten can because again, they're there are a lot of Ohio State Michigan alums in LA and Indiana lumps in l.a. right now saying. Oh cool. Maybe we'll, hopefully we get to

see our team play here. There's in the SEC. The alums don't scatter as much now for each one. As far as the next move. It's funny because I was, I was talking to her talking to someone else last night, and the talking to Ted and I'm in love with the idea of Stanford other day. And for the Big Ten at first, I was like Washington, Oregon makes sense, but now I think Stanford and Notre Dame would be such a coup because then they could say, see we, we do care about Athletics academics.

Academics are important. I was joking to somebody the other day. Like it's like that scene from Goodfellas, you know, which I know you haven't seen still, which is crazy. But that Finally walked in full a couple of years ago. Please get to you, okay.

But yeah, it's like that scene at the Copa were, you know, it's like Notre Dame's for the athletic directors but Stanford's really for the president's, you know, it's like, well, hey, if we could add this, the of those this August academic institution, really two of them, one of them, that is a national football brand and the other one that not just, you know, doesn't have this huge endowment and, and all of these rich donors but also has all of these Olympic sports.

Like that's that's that is kind of the Tonic ideal of that handshake between Administration and Athletics, that everybody seems to be after. Well, and I think it would be a shame for Stanford to be stuck in a diminished pac-10. Like, I really love to see them cash in as well. Because yeah, they, I mean, they're ivy league with an athletic program legitimately just across the board. I mean, they're probably the best combo of academics and

Athletics in the whole country. I would argue, well, Michigan would probably tell you differently, but yeah, actually, the Stanford is that. And so, yeah, they be the big feather in the, in the big Ten's cat because, like Stanford and, and Cal Berkeley. Would not be as big a feather.

Yeah. Stanford in Washington or Stanford and Oregon obvious because it but if they can get paired with Notre, Dame and then would be an enticement for Notre, Dame. Like a you play these guys sometimes already sort of arrival and you know, you can come in and, and your president can with a straight face, say we just really love the academic pairing here. I think that would be an excellent combo for everybody in the Big Ten at least we'll have to see what happens with the two

schools involved. I'm also interested though, if like do they stop if they that mean? It's like if Notre Dame doesn't join the kind of feels like the Big Ten can say, hey, we're good at 16. We don't really don't need to add anybody else if Notre Dame. Says yes, we'd like to be a part of this. They'll probably add at least one more and then it just becomes a matter of okay, what else is on the table?

How much money are we talking about, you know, in a, you know, it's funny because, you know, you start breaking down the numbers and there's a big Difference between a billion and a half dollar contract, split, you know, 16 ways versus one that's split, 18 or 20 ways but if you can add schools that suddenly get that up to 2 billion then suddenly it's like yeah you know, 20 schools is fine, we could go for that. So I do think that's something that people need to.

Keep in mind as we go through this next set of changes whenever they happen and whether they happen quickly, or whether they happen kind of as they're, you know, in a Our Pace. It's going to be interesting to watch. I mean, this really did come out of nowhere and I guess, you know, the the that was the thing that was the most surprising to me was just how little anybody had heard about it.

To not have any leaks in this era for something this big and have two major universities involved, I whatever their teaching at USC and UCLA about leak Management in offices, I think they needed bottle that and try to sell it to the rest of the country. At this point, Without a doubt and it's funny because whenever the next one happened, it's it's

going to not leak either. And that's what's incredible is first, I was going to joke earlier, oh, we're not here to talk about Kevin Durant attending trade because ESPN is at harping on that probably because they didn't break this particular news. But then really no one truly broke this booze. It was about it was you, as you've noted on the other podcast, it was hours away from half actually happening when it was announced on Twitter.

And it's interesting because You know, you also has with the SEC. I don't know who they could take. I know you guys have talked about Carolina, maybe Clemson, but I did see a couple tweets. Were people like, well, what about all the Texas schools or more Florida schools and it's like Baylor and Texas Tech should not be sitting by the

phone. I'm sorry there's no way and it's interesting that you mentioned the numbers because at this point I think Notre Dame needs it financially Notre, Dame needs a big ten. More than the Big Ten each other day. I have numbers in front of me here where the For the pandemic, like the 2018-2019, every Big Ten, school got 55 million dollars, except for Rutgers and Maryland because they were still newbies and SEC. Every school got about 45 million dollars.

I mean, those numbers have dropped because the covid they're going to wrap it back up. And as you noted, there was a report that Big Ten and ACC looking at 90 100 million dollars in just a few short years. So there's Notre Dame Spike that even more for the Big Ten, I'm in the Big Ten unlike they 20 30 years ago can just wait out Notre Dame.

Now Yeah, that's that really is ultimately kind of where we're at with things, and it's going to be interesting to see how it transpires because it does feel like at this point, you know, in the 2010 cycle, both Notre Dame and the Big Ten held some cards. And it just feels like, at this point, it's clear that the Big Ten could go all in on Notre Dame if they wanted to and I don't think Notre Dame's got the cards to beat it.

So now it's like, well, the equations change in mentality is change on these things and What are you going to do? Is result and your SEC points really interesting because I've been trying to ideate on that a little bit, I was talking about it on Twitter a little bit yesterday I don't even know like we identified Clemson and Florida State as The Logical

items. But man you look at average television audience last year like Florida state's average television audience in football was about the same as Indiana's and that should marry that should frighten. You if you're the big Ted or if you actually airworthy sec, Or if your Florida State, it's like, well, we're, you know, we aren't as dominant of a brand people her ever heard of us.

We've obviously had a lot of success, we've won a national title with in recent memory, but I think this is the big question mark and a lot of it is what is the measure of value that the conference's are using to try to figure out who to add and does that measure of value actually match? What the average fan or the average journalist perceives? The value might be of an individual institution and its

Athletics teams. I mean, that's Clemson obviously, is a big name in college football right now, but, I mean, go back in time, 10, 15 years, you know, you'd have a hard time picking Clemson out of a lineup in terms of kind of the middle of the ACC. And, you know, I've heard I've seen people making arguments about like, you know, schools that aren't like Mega successful in football that are in the Big

Ten or the SEC. The two schools that we I work for kind of fit in that, but the difference there is like you're you're already in at that point, you don't have to justify your presence. Whereas here you're talking literally about here, let's pull up a chair and give you a seat at the table. Oh, by the way, what are you bringing to the table yourself? And that's, that's going to be a really interesting thing to keep in mind as we move forward with all this. Well, that's the thing is as

Indiana guys. And you work there now I work at Mississippi State, I like to say that Mississippi state did just win a National Title. Dylan the other sport that SEC schools worship but at the same time if there was true conference Armageddon and everybody's just thrown into a bucket. I think I hope that both Indiana Mississippi state would find a home but it's not certain.

I mean we're not like Kansas where there's no way or I would say where it's like well I think you know there's a lot of my basis you know certainly come into play with all of this and and I think to some degree, both of those schools are kind of in an interesting spot. Indiana probably in a slightly better position overall. All the Mississippi state but I think neither neither of those schools is in danger, you know, this is where people get things confused.

It's like, oh well, you can add and subtract teams as needed and there's a lot more to the picture.

Whether it's how many eyeballs will this school, bring in, or how many living alumni they have or in the case of Mississippi State. Hey, there's actually some success in some Key sports here that that contributes to the overall well-being and the inventory in the inventory ends up being the most important thing because all these television partners and these streaming partner You have to have things to put on in order to get people to watch so that

they can sell subscriptions or advertising or both so well and the Big Ten Network, even though all these movies are for football, they do like to show volleyball, they do like Jacko, soccer, I mean and that matters. It's interesting what you said Also regarding Brands and like Florida State in their TV ratings and overrated Brands Miami's, another one, I mean, I wonder Florida state is like Miami and that their beloved when they're really, really, really good.

But when they're not really, really, really good. It's like, Maybe, yeah. Well, lots of things to think about and I have a sneaking suspicion, we may be talking about some more news on this front sooner rather than later. No, inside info, just a suspicion on my part, but no one has inside info. Yeah, gonna do know it really at this point, I wouldn't believe anybody that says they have inside info. It's it's pretty remarkable. So there's some it's a great thing.

And terrible thing about social is that you can guess, and maybe your guess is, we'll be right? But that didn't mean that you knew necessarily So anyway, Matt Zimmerman, thanks for joining us as always a pleasure and look forward to our next conversation. Thank you Galen love to be in here. Absolutely, thanks to everybody for listening, and thanks to our presenting sponsor home-field apparel. We will be back with more chatter on this, as the news arises.

And I'm again, as I said, I'm certain, he's going to be some more news coming up. So stick with us here. Be sure to like subscribe rate review, Crimson cast on iTunes Spotify. What have you? I'm Galen clivia will catch you folks on the flip side. Bring back the Bison. So long, everybody.

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