Semi-related question: Doesn't Bama have an insane number of jobs/roles/assistants on their staff? Have the rules changed to allow that? Or was there never a rule in place about off field coaches and they just have the revenue to support the inflated staff?
ETA: I'd love to hear Cohen's take on this in the booth tonight.
What’s the opposition?
It’s not any money. It’s not mandatory. If your school doesn’t care about baseball, who cares? Why not?
I agree, I think it will get there, as the sport grows. The streaming market and networks are great for college baseball. I think we are on the precipice of a huge amount of growth. Kid baseball participation is up, travel ball is insane, seems baseball is making a comeback after it was dealt a huge amount of blows in the 90s and early 00s, combined with football peaking, and making the mistakes that go with that.this will eventually pass.
JMO.
But the smaller schools that voted for it; it was the Big10 and Big12 that voted it down. How much will the 3rd coach make at Purdue or Iowa State? $100k? Their budgets are $80M+.I think it boils down to some schools don't want to spend money if they don't have to. It is similar to how Bama has an insane amount of support staff and analysts that other schools can't afford. They also use former NFL players in practices so there is a competitive advantage there.
Most of the smaller schools just looked at it by the coaches at those schools want the jobs for their profession more than the issue that they might be at a slight disadvantage against schools with the money to add the positions.
What’s the opposition?
It’s not any money. It’s not mandatory. If your school doesn’t care about baseball, who cares? Why not?
But the smaller schools that voted for it; it was the Big10 and Big12 that voted it down. How much will the 3rd coach make at Purdue or Iowa State? $100k? Their budgets are $80M+.
That makes even less sense. Texas and Texas Tech are great at baseball and have good fan support for the sport.Iowa State voted for it, Per Kendall Rogers, and they don’t even field a baseball team (they do have softball). If you want to blame someone in the Big XII, aim towards Texas and Tech.
I doubt it. There hasn't been any shortage of college baseball games on TV for years. The simple truth is, outside of the SEC, no one cares.
Iowa State voted for it, Per Kendall Rogers, and they don’t even field a baseball team (they do have softball). If you want to blame someone in the Big XII, aim towards Texas and Tech.
But a lot of schools that were not going to fund voted for it.
You are crazy. The coverage has grown by leaps and bounds in the last 10 years alone.I doubt it. There hasn't been any shortage of college baseball games on TV for years. The simple truth is, outside of the SEC, no one cares.
That is not true. MSU makes money on baseball. Cohen outlined the whole thing a few weeks ago.No one caring is one part of it, the additional (and perhaps more important component) is that just about everyone (including MSU) is losing money on college baseball. And the additional coach is just another $150k - $200k in the red for schools to strap their budgets with.
This article is from less than 2 years ago, and illustrates how big of a money pit college baseball is as a whole. The SEC is by far and away the biggest revenue generator of all conferences for baseball, and you still only have 2 of the 14 schools making anything close to a substantial profit.
- LSU and A&M are the only ones doing somewhat well, each making over $1 million per year.
- 9 of 14 schools are in the red
- 3 of the 14 are more or less at a break even point: Vandy, OM, and Arkansas
- MSU was losing $1.28 million per year, and is no doubt losing more now until the new stadium is paid off.
- The sum total of cash flow for the 14 schools is -$17.1 MILLION per year. That’s for the most popular college baseball league in the country, folks. Imagine what it is for the Big 10, PAC 12, and other smaller conferences.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.th...5edd22c0-465c-11e7-8b99-c709d5eb08c1.amp.html
That is not true. MSU makes money on baseball. Cohen outlined the whole thing a few weeks ago.
You are crazy. The coverage has grown by leaps and bounds in the last 10 years alone.
- MSU was losing $1.28 million per year, and is no doubt losing more now until the new stadium is paid off
Its not necessarily a title 9 issue. Its that you have too many schools that dont even fund the 11.7 so even if you added more without having to have a womens equivalent it wouldnt pass
You wanna think about this a little harder and revisit the statement for us?
We are bringing in more revenue with the new stadium. We also have huge short term debt obligation that outweighs that increased revenue. Once the debt is gone, I expect our margins will look like LSU and A&M, but right now they certainly do not. And overall, the point is that SEC baseball and college baseball as a whole are aggregate money losers. MSU going from losing $1.28 million per year to making $1.5ish million per year doesn’t change that in the slightest.
Anyway, my original statement stands. Provide a retort if you wish.
You still need to rethink it. So you think we’re the only one that didn’t pay cash for our stadium? And just how short term do you think those bonds were for?
The only ones who didn’t pay cash? Are you trying to say we just came up with $68 million of straight cash and no debt? And that’s what “everybody” does?
The original borrowing plan in 2017 at the previous $55 million price tag was for $30 million to be financed, or 55% of the total cost. See link below. There’s a good chance that had to be amended to a slightly higher number once the total ballooned up to $68 million. But, I’m somewhat speculating there.....maybe we came up with another $13 million in donations that wasn’t public knowledge.
https://www.athleticbusiness.com/st...n-for-mississippi-state-baseball-stadium.html
As far as the bonds, I’m not going to pretend to know the full specifics on every bond issued out. But most times for large projects like ours, it is a mixture of short term and long term bonds, with some of the debt being financed by 5-10 year bonds. That is the short term debt I was referring to.
The bottom line is — as dictated by common sense — you don’t build something like we built for it to take up the whole effective life of the stadium before it starts making money.
It’s making us money, and has been since everyone sent the first $500 when it broke ground 2 years ago.
I'm not sure what you heard but this is incorrect. We do not. We think we will at some point in the future but not at present we do NOT.That is not true. MSU makes money on baseball. Cohen outlined the whole thing a few weeks ago.