406football
Well-known member
If Montana is serious about moving up, there is no way around not increasing student fees
I believe that this current administration is pretty hell bent on tapping the untapped in Montana and continuing to try and make us a popular destination for new business ventures and population growth (especially through influx). Investing in the football programs to bring more attention to the universities here helps achieve that even if they don’t agree with the education value of universities. More exposure, more students, more influx, more retention after graduation. I believe the state will be more likely to invest in football than they have been for healthcare/mental health, senior/youth services or other critical expenditures. Why else does gianforte make it a point to make it to a coin toss at each stadium at least once a year (even on non-election years) just as his democratic predecessor did.Haslam clearly stated it would take additional state support. I don't think that's probably shocking to anyone. But it was also clear to me he believes it's doable.
The state and the universities will have a large ROI on that investments.
1. Yes it is possible, but you not only need to find a conference that is OK with just FB and another that is OK w/o for the rest of your sports. It is not common. Gonzaga is joining the PAC for all their sports that are offered by the conference.I have two questions:
1. Can you join an FBS conference in FB only (I think GU is doing it for BB, or are they joining for all sports?); and
2. Is an FBS program required to spend as much as other programs in their conference? Is there a rule on that?
1. Yes. Hawaii was a football only member to MWC until the conference recently got Hawaii to then recommit in all sports. I can't recall what effect this had on the mwc but it changed something with them being a full time member.I have two questions:
1. Can you join an FBS conference in FB only (I think GU is doing it for BB, or are they joining for all sports?); and
2. Is an FBS program required to spend as much as other programs in their conference? Is there a rule on that?
1. Yes it is possible, but you not only need to find a conference that is OK with just FB and another that is OK w/o for the rest of your sports. It is not common. Gonzaga is joining the PAC for all their sports that are offered by the conference.
2. Not directly, but they will have minimum requirements to be met that would dictate a minimum monetary commitment.
I believe it was the MWC that was rumored to be interested in NIU and Toledo as football only members.Thanks for the info in bold.
So, we'd have to find a conference like the BSC, AAC, or even when the PAC was looking at Toledo and NIU, that is cool with FB only members. If we can't do that, I wonder what the minimum monetary commitment would be to fulfill the minimum requirements, and what those requirements truly are.
Comparing Montana football to Gonzaga basketball is laughable.Thanks for the info in bold.
So, we'd have to find a conference like the BSC, AAC, or even when the PAC was looking at Toledo and NIU, that is cool with FB only members. If we can't do that, I wonder what the minimum monetary commitment would be to fulfill the minimum requirements, and what those requirements truly are.
Totally, right? Good thing nobody did it.Comparing Montana football to Gonzaga basketball is laughable.
How is it laughable?Comparing Montana football to Gonzaga basketball is laughable.
NIL money is almost exclusively donor money, isn't it?I don't think the beer sales and probably not the increased hoops attendance raises much. Football ticket prices would get some, but $50 more for season tickets would be about $1 million (20,000 of revenue tickets times 6 games). A guarantee game. Less home playoff games would reduce some things a bit. New conference distributions and ncaa money.
Donors don't like to fund ongoing operational expenses. They like one-time projects or building expansion, I am told.
The Performance Center was for athletes and keeping the team near the top of FCS, as well as for any future move. So done for various reasons.
The students wouldn't go for large athletic fee increases. They rioted in the past about some fee increases. I can't imagine the State Legislature would be too excited about this. Some of the legislators, I am told, don't even like to fund the universities to the extent they do now.
And what about NIL? That's on top of this.
State sales tax... split the revenue allocation between UM and MSU...cap the allocationUnfortunately, it isn't just as easy as "well just charge $2,000 for the athletic fee to students".
Straight up tuition and fees - which includes the $81 athletic fee (not including campus housing, meals, etc) for the Fall 2024 semester at 12+ credits is $4,276 for an in-state student. That cost is one of the most "affordable" in the west. Which makes it easier for MT students to be able to attend college.
You could raise it a little (like maybe to $100 or $125 per semester) with minimal pushback, but raising it a lot simply won't fly. The students would raise hell and it would directly contradict the University's current administration philosophy that the university needs to do everything it can to make attending UM possible for all MT residents.
Businesses and some donors, is my understanding.NIL money is almost exclusively donor money, isn't it?
Hopefully you body slammed GG with a good wrestling move.You have no knowledge or substance on UM athletics. You can’t say how UM can get to $40 million. So you try to attack me. And, my view is that $40 million would get UM only to mediocre. No way UM can round up $40 million. I talked to the Gianfortes today. Have you ever even met them? My good friend is former chair of BOR. in fact, two of my friends are the last 2 chairmen. How are your Regents sources? What are they indicating to you?
Closing Nothern (already rumored) and maybe Western would helpHaslam clearly stated it would take additional state support. I don't think that's probably shocking to anyone. But it was also clear to me he believes it's doable.
The state and the universities will have a large ROI on that investments.