Shehan Jeyarajah
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You know, they just endorsed 24 as well.
There definitely are coaches in the SEC that wanted to push to 24.
But it's also a big jump.
And there's a lot of people in that room who aren't excited about the idea of pushing the number to that many.
Yeah, I mean, I think that you're absolutely right, right?
Like, I think that there's a level of diminishing marginal return, especially for ESPN, if they were to go to 24, because
You talk about it, the idea of bowl games being cannibalized is certainly one dynamic to take into account.
The other thing too, and this is sort of the like giant existential dynamic, is that if we go to 24, I mean, we'd be adding a whole other round of the college football playoff.
We'd be adding a whole bunch of games in what is now the first round, which would become the second round.
there starts to become issues legitimately with scheduling and with trying to make these things happen and not go up against the NFL.
You know, one of the things that the AFCA came out with was that, yes, we want to have a 2014 playoff, but we also want the season to be over by the second week of January.
Well, the only way to make that happen would be to play games directly up against NFL games, including some playoff games in some cases.
and obviously that is a huge loser for television networks that that's not something that they're excited about we've seen even just in the first round as is uh you know espn has sold off the two games every year that go up against nfl regular season games on a saturday and those games which are broadcast on tnt get about 40 of the viewership of the other games and that's not just the case of the group of five game that's also texas clemson last year for example so
You know, I think it's kind of a mixed bag, right?
I think that ESPN certainly looks and says, well, you know what?
Like this is diminishing returns for us at a certain point.
And, you know, is it necessarily better for us to continue pushing outwards?
And also, I mean, I think that certainly college athletics and the college football playoff view the television networks as being able and willing to continue giving them money the more that they expand.
And there is going to be a point where they have to sit back and think, well, maybe this isn't a good deal for us anymore.