Again, I agree with you. There are games you can play to make incrementally more money if you do one kind of thing versus the other.
But the UNLV guy's post basically says that everyone in sports marketing or whatever is just 100% sure that ESPN is going to be swimming in cash Scrooge McDuck style before the end of the LHN contract because of increases in bandwidth and the fact that we'll all have devices that we can watch anywhere. I think that guy is full of crap, is all I'm saying.
If Alabama and LSU play a football game right now and it's televised on ESPN then ESPN owns the rights to that production forever. When OU and KSU play on Fox next weekend, Fox will own the rights to that broadcast until Monday morning.
If you want to watch it again? You have to pay the schools. Right now it's primitive. Pay $85 to kstatehd.tv and watch it again. It will change.
I'm just brainstorming here. I'm sure reality will turn out different:
You want to make a fatty-style video for YouTube? Here's a convenient service to grab whatever chunk of video you want for a small fee. Want to stick video of your favorite play onto Facebook with your own play-by-play? Easy. Only a few pennies.
And once people get used to the online distribution they can add even more content. In the old days (now) they invite TV stations to the press conferences. They give it away just to generate interest in the program. Want to watch the "Charlie Weis gets fired" press conference live in HD? That'll be a dollar. Want to just see the filtered highlights? There will be 20 versions of the highlights up on YouTube in about a half hour from people who bought it from our convenient video service.
The schools will get paid for that.