Week 0 questions that should have stayed in my head....
- By 4Afan
- Edgy's Lost His Mind Free Football Board
- 32 Replies
Yes.Would you agree on an away deal only if you were the coach?
Yes.Would you agree on an away deal only if you were the coach?
Would you agree on an away deal only if you were the coach?Because it is new, is every team doing a week 0 game? This is all going to evolve as time moves on.
Maybe schools don't mind not having the hassle of everything that will go into a week 0 scrimmage???
Because it is new, is every team doing a week 0 game? This is all going to evolve as time moves on.I understand but why would anyone agree to lose an at home scrimmage (concessions, gate, etc) and not get it in return the next year. Unless some programs just don’t do that.
I understand but why would anyone agree to lose an at home scrimmage (concessions, gate, etc) and not get it in return the next year. Unless some programs just don’t do that.Again, who says these are two year week 0 agreements?
As someone else pointed out yes, the coaches aren't thinking about the gate/concessions obviously; but they might be thinking about dress rehearsal (same pre-game routine etc).While I'm very interested in seeing how these scrimmages go I think you guys are over thinking it. I don't see these scrimmages having a game night atmosphere or resembling a game at all. As someone else mentioned they will most likely resemble college spring games where offenses and defenses run a set amount of plays and coaches may even discuss what they want to run. I don't think anyone is thinking about the gate, assuming they even charge, or the concessions, assuming they offer them. It's a scrimmage, nothing more.
All.... The il.8 to 18.com schedule is still showing the Raiders and Blue Devils having the week one game through 2027. But I would imagine that could be changed . With QND now playing in the CS8 (with their small enrollment) the benefit to load up in preparation of possible postseason play is already built in. Change those first two weeks. Not cream puffs though. RatsyThanks. I started following Rochester about the time they came into the CS8 from the Cornbelt. At the time, it was by no means a unanimous view that the switch was a good decision. Initially, the Rockets were the smallest school in the conference, playing mostly 5A-6A teams. QND may have an adjustment period but playing up can be an asset in the playoffs. Doesn't QND also have a chance to reschedule different teams for non-conference next year? Quincy and R-B is a tough Week 1-Week 2 start.
Again, who says these are two year week 0 agreements?Would you do an away week zero with your team and have no guarantee of hosting the following year?
I don't necessary disagree coaches probably won't but school admin are a different animal. Also im just bored waiting to watch some high school american footballI don't think we need to over think this. Just an opportunity for a test drive before week 1 game. I love it.
I don't think the coaches care about hosting, gate fees and concessions for this. Honesty, if I were the host school, I wouldn't charge a gate fee. Probably wouldn't have concessions either.
I haven't heard of the mechanics of the scrimmages but I'd bet they are going to look similar to a D1 spring intersquad scrimmage. No clock and several different situational periods.
I think he meant as far as school opener and revenue wise. Some schools make a huge deal out of that first week before the game with powder puff and band performances and what have youYes, it's a scrimmage so who cares if you have home field advantage? It has no implications on the regular season.
Yes, it's a scrimmage so who cares if you have home field advantage? It has no implications on the regular season.Would you do an away week zero with your team and have no guarantee of hosting the following year?
That's how small colleges survive.Yes, I understand the enrollment spurring thing. But, those 180 players all come with COSTS -- academic costs, which apply to all students, and athletic costs, which apply to athletes only.
I'm a little leery of colleges that boast of huge percentages of the student body involved in athletics. Take Quincy University here in Illinois, for example. Almost 50% of their student body plays at least one sport. Is that healthy? As a sports fan, I'd say yes as a knee jerk response. The more I think of it objectively, however, what does that do in a school of about 1000 students? What kind of social dynamic is there between athletes and non-athletes? Is it really a sustainable model financially?
While the student isn't paying the full tuition sticker price, the institution still receives the full sticker price.Healthy from a program standpoint, for sure, but I have to wonder about the economics of this.
What must their coaching staff be like in terms of numbers?
Does it make economic sense considering...
- Only a HANDFUL of kids who enroll in Wartburg or any private liberal arts college pay the sticker price.
- Coaches, trainers, and other football related athletic department staff and infrastructure all must be paid.
- The cost of equipment, travel, etc. for a squad that size.
- No TV revenue sharing.
- Wartburg isn't a large school with athletic revenue and expense budgets in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
Hey Google how do the crime rates in Rochester, IL compare to the national averageNo thanks
Hey Google what time is sundown today in Rochester, IL?
Be there or be squareThere's a 98.65% chance it'll be white... er right at 8:12pm today.
Would you do an away week zero with your team and have no guarantee of hosting the following year?Who says they are not just one year handshake agreements?
Interesting point since in past all schools got something from the inter-team scrimmage assuming they had concessions open.
Again, that assumes they are 2 years agreements.
It is all fluid and maybe we see changes as the summer/week 0 evolve.
The school has been around for 160 years. I'd say it's pretty sustainable.😜Yes, I understand the enrollment spurring thing. But, those 180 players all come with COSTS -- academic costs, which apply to all students, and athletic costs, which apply to athletes only.
I'm a little leery of colleges that boast of huge percentages of the student body involved in athletics. Take Quincy University here in Illinois, for example. Almost 50% of their student body plays at least one sport. Is that healthy? As a sports fan, I'd say yes as a knee jerk response. The more I think of it objectively, however, what does that do in a school of about 1000 students? What kind of social dynamic is there between athletes and non-athletes? Is it really a sustainable model financially?