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Showing posts with label losses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label losses. Show all posts

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Big East Was Working on TV Rights Before Losses

Commissioner John Marinatto said the league plans to revive discussions about grant of rights when the conference becomes more stable.

A grant of rights is a contractual agreement between a conference and school that makes switching leagues virtually impossible. The school would have to leave the TV rights for most of its football games behind.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 schools have granted their rights to the conferences, while Big 12 leaders, in an effort to bring stability to their league, recently agreed to grant their top-tier TV rights to the conference for at least six years.

"We were actually planning to move forward with a similar concept prior to the situation that occurred three weeks ago," Marinatto said Wednesday during the Big East's men's basketball media day in Manhattan.

Last month, Syracuse and Pittsburgh announced they were leaving the Big East to join the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Marinatto said the Oct. 2 meeting of Big East presidents in Washington was originally supposed to be about the league's upcoming television negotiations. The conference's deals with ESPN run through next season.

That meeting instead ended up being about how to move on without Pitt and Syracuse.

"It was intended to talk about those things. The grant of rights and moving forward with our TV plans and solidifying what we were going to do," he said.

The Big East is now trying to become a 12-team football league. The plan is to add SMU, Houston, UCF, Navy, Air Force and Boise State to the remaining football members: Connecticut, Cincinnati, South Florida, Louisville, West Virginia and Rutgers.

No invitations have gone out yet, but that could change soon. Once the Big East gets membership sorted out, grant of rights will again be a topic of discussion.

"We're going to talk about it again as we move forward and get more stability in our league," Marinatto said. "Of all of the tools that you can use to reinforce stability, I think that's probably the most important and the most effective."

If everything falls into place perfectly for the Big East, and it loses no more members, the league could have 14 football schools and 19 basketball schools next year.

Marinatto said again that Pitt and Syracuse, who are contractually bound to the league for the next two seasons, will not be allowed out earlier.

"Absolutely not," he said. "We have no intentions of doing that. Period. Exclamation point. End of sentence."

He said 19 basketball teams makes for easy scheduling.

"We've modeled it. If you have a 19-team basketball conference everybody plays each other once," he said. "We've actually done models for 24."

While the Big East was built on basketball, expansion and conference realignment in major college athletics has been driven by football.

The Big East has made protecting its status as an automatic qualifying conference in the Bowl Championship Series its top priority in expansion. That's why landing Boise State, which is 2,685 miles away from the Big East offices in Providence, R.I., is so important.

The current BCS television and bowl contracts run through the 2013 season. The Big East's AQ status is locked in through those deals. Beyond that there are no guarantees for any league.

The commissioners of the 11 major college football conferences will start discussing the future of the BCS beyond 2013 next year.

"It's not appropriate to speculate about what the standards for automatic qualification will be," BCS executive director Bill Hancock said. "Nobody knows."


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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Hawkins leaves behind legacy of losses

Dan Hawkins came to Colorado after racking up 45 wins and four conference titles in his last four years at Boise State, helping lay the foundation for the unprecedented success the Broncos have enjoyed since his departure.

"I thought he would bring that same level of play to Colorado," said Colorado chancellor Philip P. DiStefano.

[+] EnlargeHawkins John Rieger/US PresswireCoach Dan Hawkins was never able to find consistent success at Colorado.There weren't many mile-highs over Dan Hawkins' four-plus years at Colorado. The highest was a win over then-No. 3 Oklahoma in 2007 that keyed off the only season under Hawkins that ended with a bowl.

Any glimmer of hope that win provided was snuffed out by a mountain of 16 losses over the next two seasons.

They hoped he'd at least near the heights former coach Bill McCartney once did as coach in the early 90s. Hawkins never did.

Even that 2007 season ended with three more losses to unranked teams, including an Independence Bowl loss that denied Hawkins his best opportunity to secure a winning season in Boulder.

His one big high was far outweighed by numerous lows, beginning with an embarrassing loss to FCS opponent Montana State in his first game as Buffaloes coach. Last year, his team went on national television and fell behind Toledo by 30 points to begin 0-2 in a season that Hawkins said would feature "10 wins and no excuses." The Buffaloes finished 3-9.

If he didn't regret his "Go play intramurals, brother!" rant at the 2007 signing day news conference, he should have. It did nothing but provide an embarrassing YouTube moment for a coach short on success at the major level. And as another coach in the Big 12 can attest, YouTube fame never dies. For better or worse, that might be his most lasting moment as Colorado coach.

But no low was more spectacular than the one he treated Colorado fans to on Saturday, a loss like no other. He refused to run the ball consistently ("We just didn't want to be one-dimensional," he said.) with a four-touchdown lead against a team that previously had a strong case as the worst team in a BCS conference, and the only team in the Big 12 worse than Hawkins' squad.

He provided Kansas with its biggest comeback in school history, and the largest blown lead (28 points) in the 121-year history of Colorado football. Worse, he allowed it to happen in just over 11 minutes.

Give Hawkins credit: He went out with class. Ten minutes of Tuesday's farewell was spent thanking any and everyone for the time he'd been given to lead the Buffs.

"They, like the rest of us, wish we had more wins," Hawkins said.

By now, everyone knew those wins weren't coming under Hawkins, who also wished the program well, alluding to the "national championship chapter that's right around the corner."

Hawkins replacement, interim coach Brian Cabral, emotionally thanked the coach as well.

"There's no question Hawk gave us everything he had," he said. "No question. It wasn't for a lack of trying."

But despite those efforts, Hawkins never even came close to the success everyone in the program hoped. He never reached the heights of former Kansas coach Mark Mangino or the popularity of former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach, but neither went out with the panache of Hawkins' blazing fiasco.

That capped off a string of 17 consecutive losses outside Colorado, and the program's first-ever 0-5 start in Big 12 play, and the loss to the Jayhawks leaves the Buffaloes alone at the bottom of the Big 12 totem pole.

A reporter asked Hawkins on Monday how you come back from a loss like that.

Truth is, you don't.

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