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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Mar 21, 2021 22:59:35 GMT -8
It means we get another team to advance by playing or getting a freebie, but the NCAA still gives the conference another 150k for sending a team one step further. I'm not clear on this. Is it 150k for each game played, or is it 150k for just being moved along in the bracket? Seems to me like UCLA should have earned their share of the TV revenue for each of their 2 games played so far, while u0 has generated 0 revenue, with the Pac's share of that being some fraction of 0, minus u0 expenses. It's not $150K. There is no number before it happens. Typically, the pot increases each year. That did not happen last year, and it may not occur this year, because of coronavirus. However, let's take 2013. In 2013, each win paid each conference $1.58 million. That stops, when teams reach the Final Four. Winning Final Four games provide you with no additional money. UCLA has played and won two games, but it also gets a share for making the field of 68 in the first place. If 2021 looks like 2013, the Bruins will have earned the conference $4.74 million. I am not certain how Oregon's situation will be handled. However, if 2021 looks like 2013, the Ducks have already earned the conference at least $1.58 million and maybe $3.16 million. Rooting against a conference team makes no financial sense until at least the Final Four.
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Post by qbeaver on Mar 23, 2021 10:20:36 GMT -8
It means we get another team to advance by playing or getting a freebie,but the NCAA still gives the conference another 150k for sending a team one step further. I'm not clear on this. Is it 150k for each game played, or is it 150k for just being moved along in the bracket? Seems to me like UCLA should have earned their share of the TV revenue for each of their 2 games played so far, while u0 has generated 0 revenue, with the Pac's share of that being some fraction of 0, minus u0 expenses. I think I read we get credit for a unit even though uo moved on without playing.
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