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Hafley
Feb 9, 2024 13:23:46 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by hcpride on Feb 9, 2024 13:23:46 GMT -5
Will HC be one of the "bottom feeders?" Only if they join the ACC.
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Post by Sons of Vaval on Feb 9, 2024 13:24:32 GMT -5
Will HC be one of the "bottom feeders?" He might want some payback against HC, after experiencing losses to the tune of 49-13, 55-0, and 42-28 while at Brown.
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Hafley
Feb 9, 2024 13:37:14 GMT -5
Post by bfoley82 on Feb 9, 2024 13:37:14 GMT -5
I’m a HC fan but root for BC as well. The BC hate by some here is boring and just jealousy in disguise. BC is an excellent school an play real D-1 athletics. It’s very difficult for ANY school outside the SEC or Big 10 to compete for D-1 championships. Yeah, I know. Playing Bucknell in front of 5000 fans is way better than playing Clemson or Florida State. The academic elitism is phony as well. A Holy Cross degree is no better than one from BC. Sorry. BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (February 8, 2024) – Southeastern Conference Commissioner Greg Sankey on Thursday announced revenue distribution of $741.0 million to the SEC’s 14 universities for the 2022-23 fiscal year, which ended August 31, 2023. The total includes $718.0 million distributed directly from the conference office, and an additional $23.0 million retained by universities that participated in 2022-23 football bowl games. The amount distributed from the conference office, excluding bowl expenses retained by participants, averaged $51.3 million per school. “SEC member universities are proud to support thousands of student-athletes who participate in broad-based athletics programs across the league,” Sankey said. “SEC universities are committed to providing a high-level experience for all of our participants through an impactful and life-changing college experience that includes world-class support in coaching, training, academic counseling, medical care, mental health support, nutrition, life-skills development and post-eligibility healthcare coverage for student-athletes.” Currently more than 5,400 female and male student-athletes across the SEC receive athletically related financial aid, with more than 7,300 total scholarship and non-scholarship student-athletes participating in sports sponsored by SEC universities. Athletics departments at SEC member universities continue to fund scholarships based on a student-athlete’s full cost of attendance, while also providing financial awards for academic achievement. The total distribution amount is comprised of revenue generated from television agreements, post-season bowl games, the College Football Playoff, the SEC Football Championship Game, the SEC Men's Basketball Tournament, and NCAA Championships. The distribution amount does not include an additional $8.1 million of NCAA and SEC grants divided among the fourteen member universities. The total revenue for 2022-23 is an increase above the $721.8 million distributed in 2021-22. The average per school distribution increased from $49.9 million in 2021-22, not including bowl money retained by participants.
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