He was worried any prospective 1st round opponent would channel the Physic Friends Network and bid $46,768.01DSUrocks07 wrote:$.50
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
He was worried any prospective 1st round opponent would channel the Physic Friends Network and bid $46,768.01DSUrocks07 wrote:$.50
No where does it say the bid winner gets the game, it's not that cut and dry. If not for the submitted guarantees (bids), JMU would obviously make more money for the NCAA.When determining host institutions for playoff games when both teams are unseeded,
criteria shall apply as follows: (1) quality of facility, (2) revenue potential plus
estimated net receipts, (3) attendance history and potential, (4) team’s performance
(e.g., conference place finish, head-to-head results and number of Division I
opponents), and (5) student-athlete well-being (e.g., travel, missed class time).
Last year NDSU bid $100k for our first round game.Dukie95 wrote: These things aren't usually opened up for public consumption, but I would wonder how many times ASU, UD, Montana actually submitted a higher bid for their games...or was it awarded irrespective of bids, because the NCAA knows they are cash cows. It could be that they've never faced a team with such an agressive bid that even trumps potential gate receipts of a 20,000+ stadium.
Really? Because most rumors I have heard from a number of schools from 2005 to 2009, a large number of bids for the opening round were 55k-65k. I believed that those numbers were still considered a competitive bid.FargoBison wrote:Last year NDSU bid $100k for our first round game.Dukie95 wrote: These things aren't usually opened up for public consumption, but I would wonder how many times ASU, UD, Montana actually submitted a higher bid for their games...or was it awarded irrespective of bids, because the NCAA knows they are cash cows. It could be that they've never faced a team with such an agressive bid that even trumps potential gate receipts of a 20,000+ stadium.
Even JMU's AD admitted that he was surprised by the amounts being bid now.urmite wrote:Really? Because most rumors I have heard from a number of schools from 2005 to 2009, a large number of bids for the opening round were 55k-65k. I believed that those numbers were still considered a competitive bid.FargoBison wrote:
Last year NDSU bid $100k for our first round game.
Yeah, our AD said that is what he bid. We made $30-40k after the NCAA took their cut from the gate(I think attendance for the game was between 12-13k).urmite wrote:Really? Because most rumors I have heard from a number of schools from 2005 to 2009, a large number of bids for the opening round were 55k-65k. I believed that those numbers were still considered a competitive bid.FargoBison wrote:
Last year NDSU bid $100k for our first round game.
Bids aren't supposed to be opened until after matchups are set.BearIt wrote:You have to wonder if EKU essentially bought their way into the playoffs. Perhaps the committee looked at the 7-4's (sans Delaware) and decided to take the team with the highest bid.
Delaware was left out due to only having 6 DI wins.
BearIt wrote:You have to wonder if EKU essentially bought their way into the playoffs. Perhaps the committee looked at the 7-4's (sans Delaware) and decided to take the team with the highest bid.
Delaware was left out due to only having 6 DI wins.
dbackjon wrote:BearIt wrote:You have to wonder if EKU essentially bought their way into the playoffs. Perhaps the committee looked at the 7-4's (sans Delaware) and decided to take the team with the highest bid.
Delaware was left out due to only having 6 DI wins.
They don't open bids until AFTER the field is selected
BearIt wrote:dbackjon wrote:
They don't open bids until AFTER the field is selected
Damn... I was fishing for a scandal.
Any word? I've seen JMU's and ODU's posted, but that it...any numbers from some of the other schools?Pitz wrote:Is there a comprehensive list anywhere of bids released from other schools for each round?
..peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard..
So they lost the game and a boat load of money.UNHWildCats wrote:Responding to a open records request, Eastern Kentucky has announced their first round bid was $63,318.75.
Eh, how much did they lose really? $15 per ticket even with that paltry attendance (announced at 2388) would give them about $36k. Then you add in that the OVC helped boost their bid, so that's money the OVC lost, not EKU. $63k is really a pretty modest bid - not crazy at all. When it comes down to it, JMU just low-balled the bid.CAA Flagship wrote:So they lost the game and a boat load of money.UNHWildCats wrote:Responding to a open records request, Eastern Kentucky has announced their first round bid was $63,318.75.
Factor in the cost of gameday operations and possibly a subsidy for student tickets, I guessing somebody lost at least 40K. I'm thinking that is a boat load for EKU/OVC.GannonFan wrote:Eh, how much did they lose really? $15 per ticket even with that paltry attendance (announced at 2388) would give them about $36k. Then you add in that the OVC helped boost their bid, so that's money the OVC lost, not EKU. $63k is really a pretty modest bid - not crazy at all. When it comes down to it, JMU just low-balled the bid.CAA Flagship wrote: So they lost the game and a boat load of money.