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ACC Exploring Starting TV Network
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ACC Exploring Starting TV Network


Jan 14, 2013, 10:52 AM

By Michael Smith & John Ourand, Staff Writers

Published January 14, 2013, Page 1 Font Size Resize
The ACC has formed a committee of athletic directors and hired Wasserman Media Group to explore the financial benefits of launching its own conference network.

While its media rights are tied up with ESPN for the next 15 years, that hasn’t stopped the conference from beginning the process of deciding whether such a channel is feasible. It hasn’t had formal talks with ESPN, which would have to play a big role in any ACC channel since the network controls the league’s rights.

? How Coke’s salute to Saban came to be.

? Planning sales deck for the
playoffs.
But ACC Commissioner John Swofford has quietly been exploring a branded channel and began floating the idea for it in the fall, around the time that Notre Dame joined the league in all sports but football. The Fighting Irish have committed to play five ACC opponents in football each season, but it will maintain its independence.

For the ACC, it potentially could allow the conference to keep up financially with the Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC, which have all launched or are close to launching branded channels, and sources say the conference sees it as an enticement to keep schools from being seduced by other conferences.

Sources also say there continues to be angst among the conference’s presidents and athletic directors over the league’s ability to keep up with its peer conferences financially. The Big Ten lured Maryland, a charter member of the ACC, away from the conference with its future media revenue projections. The Big Ten’s numbers, buoyed by the growth of its channel, showed that each school’s revenue will rise to more than $40 million by 2020, compared with $24 million in the ACC.

This past year, the Big Ten led all conferences with a per-school payout of $24 million, compared with the ACC’s payout of $13 million. Launching a channel would address those financial concerns because it would represent a major dual revenue stream of license fees from distributors and advertising revenue.

Maryland administrators cited the Big Ten Network as a main drawing card for its decision to leave the ACC for the Big Ten, which it is expected to join in 2014. Persistent rumors have some ACC schools exploring conference options, although the league’s presidents have publicly stated their commitment to stay.

Wasserman Media Group was brought on board to consult with the ACC’s athletic directors on future plans. Dean Jordan in WMG’s Raleigh, N.C., office will lead the agency’s relationship with the conference. He also consulted with the ACC when it renegotiated its TV contract with ESPN last year. Jordan will be working with Swofford and all of the ACC’s athletic directors on the TV committee, except for Maryland’s Kevin Anderson because of the Terrapins’ exit.

ESPN would represent a major voice in any channel launch and it is believed to be lukewarm on forming one, according to sources close to the discussions. ESPN currently has a contract to pay the ACC $3.6 billion over 15 years — averaging $240 million a year — for the conference’s media rights. It then sublicenses a syndication package to Raycom Sports, which, in turn, sublicenses some rights to Fox Sports Net.

To start a channel, the ACC believes that it needs something along the lines of 30 to 35 football games a year. Plus, it wants the rights to re-air games. It remains to be seen how many basketball games the conference would seek for a channel, but the Big Ten Network, by comparison, airs live more than 40 football games, 105 men’s basketball games and 55 women’s basketball games each season.

The ACC would draw its inventory of live games either from ESPN’s inventory — primarily the games that air on ESPN3 — or Raycom’s syndicated package.

To start a channel, it’s also expected that the ACC would roll its sponsorship and digital rights into one entity with the channel. Raycom currently holds the ACC’s digital and corporate sponsor rights.

Another reason for ESPN’s reluctance to move forward is that it is preparing to launch an SEC channel in August 2014, sources said, which would make it difficult to launch an ACC channel in many of those same markets, like Florida, Georgia and South Carolina where the SEC and ACC footprints overlap.

Plus, ESPN’s experience with branded college channels has been difficult in Texas, where it has had problems getting significant distribution for Longhorn Network.

The ACC, however, is hoping that its channel could work alongside any SEC channel. If the SEC channel is headquartered in ESPN Regional Television’s offices in Charlotte, an ACC channel could be stationed within that same infrastructure.
Charlotte-based Raycom could be the hub for such a channel as well.

Any obstacle is distribution, as distributors almost certainly would resist paying for an ACC channel. DirecTV, Comcast and Time Warner Cable are the biggest distributors in the ACC’s territory. Each operator has complained about the cost of sports rights and has had public battles with networks to keep those costs down.

There is no clear consensus inside the ACC on whether it has either the game inventory or the brand strength to make a channel work. But the conference clearly is following the lead of its peers among the big five conferences.

The Big Ten pioneered the strategy in 2007 when it launched its own channel with Fox. The Pac-12 launched multiple regional networks last year, and the SEC is formulating plans to start a channel with ESPN next year.

The outlier among the big five conferences is the Big 12. Commissioner Bob Bowlsby confirmed last week that the Big 12 will not be launching its own channel since all of the conference’s game inventory is tied up in deals with ESPN and Fox. Most of the 10 schools in the Big 12 have sold their third-tier TV games to Fox as part of separate deals, while Texas partnered with ESPN on the Longhorn Network.

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O'kay what would be the dangers, if any, to Clemson if this


Jan 14, 2013, 10:59 AM

network is started? I am leery of anything the ACC does and we need to tread with caution.


Message was edited by: AThomas®


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Re: ACC Exploring Starting TV Network


Jan 14, 2013, 11:01 AM

This is just a means for Swofford to create a new revenue stream for his "friends and benefactors" at Raycom.

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Re: ACC Exploring Starting TV Network- amen


Jan 14, 2013, 11:03 AM

we have a "network" now. it is for his son at raycom to dilly dally with. the nepotism and lack of vision from the acc AND pRESIDENTS IS MONUMENTAL

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Rediculous idea


Jan 14, 2013, 11:01 AM

The ACC doesn't have enough decent teams to provide good primary matchups, much less secondary games. I don't think too many consumers are going to be clamoring to watch Wake Forest play Duke in an almost empty stadium.

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Clemson vs TCU says hello***


Jan 14, 2013, 11:52 AM



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Re: Rediculous idea


Jan 14, 2013, 12:18 PM [ in reply to Rediculous idea ]

But they could always watch Clemson and Boston College in basketball. Do you really think that Clemson is such a huge draw on TV for Football. Duke outdraws Clemson in basketball.
Read the article, everyone in SC watches the SEC!!!

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Re: I am not interested in Bama and the SEC. Did not watch


Jan 14, 2013, 12:21 PM

the Nat. Championship game.

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I'm in SC and I don't watch the SEC unless it has some


Jan 14, 2013, 12:53 PM [ in reply to Re: Rediculous idea ]

impact on Clemson.

And that's not really what the article said either.

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Re: I don't either. As far as basketball, goes. you will


Jan 14, 2013, 1:54 PM

see better at your local high school.

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not sure why anyone would possibly be against having


Jan 14, 2013, 11:15 AM

an ACC network. i'm all in.

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FAT TAX NOW!


If that means signing away all our media rights to John


Jan 14, 2013, 11:17 AM

"Bozo the Clown" Swofford I am not sure sure it would be in our best interests.

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Aren't most if not all TV rights controlled by ACC


Jan 14, 2013, 11:31 AM

So now instead of the Clemson vs. FCS early season game maybe being on ESPN3 or no TV, it would be on ACC Network. The Clemson baseball game or ACC Tournament that was not televised would now be televised. As well as the women's basketball games. In exchange Clemson and all other schools get around $1 to $4 million a year. Bad decision, eh?

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I think this is a great idea. And honestly this


Jan 14, 2013, 11:23 AM

is where basketball can really make up some ground in providing revenue to the league. Honestly unless you are in kentucky who is watching basketball in the sec right now. 0 nationally and just a few in the SEC states.

UNC, Duke, Notre Dame in Indiana, Cuse, BC, UL in Kentucky, and PITT. Those people are watching BBall and bball coverage. I mean my goodness Cuse plays bball in its football dome and fills it UP!http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier_Dome

me personally its recruiting season.

But the potential is there as well to knock down the Big ten et all in distribution. If there is a fight over the BTN and ACCN then we can kick them out in southern and Atlantic States. drop them to an extra package.

the ACC needs to buy raycom rebrand it. get doc walker back and take all the profits for themselves.

if FSU CU UL UM UNC and VT will get to be consistent winners (not even consistent national championship teams) then ACC football can really be a power house in viewership.

NCState, Cuse, BC, UVA can break the top 25 every now and then really help the cause too. But as we all know there has to be committment to Football and not just bball.

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Mississippi Tiger --------- Clemson University - 8 Time National Football Champions - 1900, 1906, 1948, 1950, 1981, 1983, 2016, 2018


Re: I agree. Great idea.***


Jan 14, 2013, 12:22 PM



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Very tricky path


Jan 14, 2013, 11:31 AM

ESPN can't say they are against the ACC network. But clearly, they have SEC first and will want it to go. So maybe 2016 or 2017 in their mind.

ESPN will continue to work to beat down the ACC football brand, not killing it, but working to make SEC:ACC as Globetrotters:Generals.

The question is what leverage the ACC has against ESPN to get them to act. Notre Dame is likely the key there, regardless of whether they stay on their own or come into the ACC for football.

Given the ACC went from 9 to 8 games, I'm not as anti-ACC and Swofford as I once was, nor do I think they are as anti-Clemson as they once were. (Yes, there is still caution and wariness but it takes everyone to be strong and viable when B1G, SEC, B12, and P10 would most likely benefit from the ACC disappearing).

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ACC also exploring the forward pass.


Jan 14, 2013, 11:44 AM

It's exciting to be moving toward the future.

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Re:I think we have the forward pass worked out. Ask


Jan 14, 2013, 12:23 PM

LSU

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I Can Just See That Sworfford Disaster Network


Jan 14, 2013, 11:46 AM

They would feature Duke vs UNC Lacrosse and Wake Forest vs Virginia Pergola building teams 24/7.

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Why?? Did Chad Swofford lose his job at Raycom?


Jan 14, 2013, 11:51 AM

And daddy has to get him a new one?

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Re: Why?? Did Chad Swofford lose his job at Raycom?


Jan 14, 2013, 12:01 PM

Chad Swofford has nothing to do with this, and he is very qualified to be in his position.

Senior Director, New Media and Business Development
Joined Raycom in 2007 as Manager of ACC Marketing and was named Director of New Media & Marketing in 2009. He currently oversees all web and mobile initiatives for Raycom and the ACC Network, in addition to managing the ACC Digital Network. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and is an alumnus of Ohio University’s School of Sports Management graduate program. He worked at Boston College prior to joining Raycom.

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If you cant see how Daddy looks after Chad, you're nuts


Jan 14, 2013, 1:08 PM

Look at our ridiculously stupid tv deal with Raycom.....helps Chad.
Guess when BC joined the ACC....yep, when Chad worked at BC.
It's all about the Swoffie.

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Re: ACC Exploring Starting TV Network


Jan 14, 2013, 12:04 PM

Raycom owns the whole history of ACC basketball and ACC sports in general.

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A Lacrosse and Women's Soccer channel? FINALLY!!! ***


Jan 14, 2013, 12:47 PM

nm

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guys


Jan 14, 2013, 1:26 PM

What everyone is missing is ESPN owns our rights now. The ACC network would add nothing to them or us unless cable and satilite systems were willing to add such a channel at an extra cost. There is no big name trams to warrant the cost. They only real markets are already covered by the SEC and the football and basketball (ACC) is already on ESPN so no one would pay for second rate football that is not Clemson or Fla. St. The ACC network adds nothing and will never be.

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The avenue for the ACC Channel that is currently being


Jan 14, 2013, 1:44 PM

investigated is with NBC and NBC Sports. Notre Dame is playing a major role in the talks. When ND and Louisville were added it envoked a clause that allows for re-negotiation of the current contracts with ESPN and RAYCOM. I'll have to go back and find the link, but Robert MacCrea at TCI ran a story on this shortly after the season ended in one of his Insider Reports. This article left that possibility of NBC out of the mix. The model being used is the SEC/CBS game of the Week format.

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Link for ACC Network


Jan 14, 2013, 2:01 PM

http://www.theclemsoninsider.com/mb/showthread.php?t=22888&highlight=network

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