Here are the (overnight) numbers, I'm going to refrain comment at the moment, but I'll jump in later on my thoughts.
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2013...y-on-espn-abc/
Here are the (overnight) numbers, I'm going to refrain comment at the moment, but I'll jump in later on my thoughts.
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2013...y-on-espn-abc/
I'm not surprised. Other than the Nola bowl, I won't watch one second of this glut of bowls on national tv, except maybe the bcsncg.
The difference is, the Nola bowl had a great crowd and great atmosphere. It's a feather in our cap.
But it's still a "meaningless" game to the guy in Peoria, Illinois.
Whether or not the NCAA holds together, why not a 16 team BCS playoff, a separate 16 team "mid-major" playoff and do away with bowl games altogether? And of course, keep the playoff formats for FCS and Divs. II and III.
9 PM Eastern start time was late, and who really watches Tulane?
Too many Bowls just like too many reality shows, everything is getting watered down in the eyes of the FAN. Too many week day games during the year. If you can turn on the TV and watch a game anytime you basically want, it becomes oh well, to too many fans. They are saturating the air waves, and Fans will continue to not watch the barrage of games, too many Bowl Games and too many that have NO HISTORY. Its too many NOT special games being played!
ESPN can suck it for that late start.
Sounds like Espn has a lousy marketing department.
I'm at work away from home, with no competition from wife and kid to watch Real Housewives of whatever or Dora, and I still have not been watching many of the bowl games thus far; although, I did watch the Cajuns game twice if that counts!
Playoff is the way to save this, as if the Cajuns are in then I want to see who they may be playing in later rounds. Seems simple to me, let advertisers of current bowls continue to advertise for playoff games so they continue to make money. ESPN makes even more because more viewers equal higher costs for commercials. Schools make more, especially home teams, because they get another home game and revenue from game. Only loser is the cities and stadiums that currently host bowl games, but who cares about them anyway.
Late games also suck big time. I've started to watch hockey, for one because I live in darned frozen north but also most of the games start at 7 or 7:30, done around 9:30-10. I must be getting old!! Complaining that I can't stay up past the news!!
24 Teams.....All conference Champions and the remainder are at large bids. Use current bowl locations to host many of these games. Top 8 National Seeds would get byes. 9-24 would play each other, giving the higher seed a lower ranked team, 9 vs 24, 10 vs 23, 11 vs 21, etc etc. The higher ranked team would have the game played in a regional location (preferbaly a current bowl location) near their school. For instance if UL was playing a Big 10 team, it could be in Detroit, if they were playing a Big 12 team it could be in Houston or Dallas, etc. The Final Four games would be held at the current BCS locations on a rotating basis, Sugar, Rose, Orange and Fiesta, you could add possibly Dallas and another location and let them rotate the games periodically, with each loaction hosting the national championship game every 4th or 6 year, etc, but when they were not hosting that, they would have a high likelihood of hosting one of the semifinal games.
My suggestion......Thoughts.....
I like the thought of 3 tournaments someone mentioned in another thread. 3 16 team tournaments with the same thought process of the NIT. I think it would get more attention than the NIT. The only issue I then see is that you have the same issue of a 6-6 SEC team getting in over a 8-4/9-3 Sunbelt team? Do you exclude P5 from the 2nd and 3rd tier because they really don't care anyway?
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