2025 ACC Thread (Hoops)

jbix80

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1,154
My son graduates from a small college in Tennessee this May. As an early graduation gift, I took him to Cameron today for the game against Virginia. He’s a Duke fan 🤮. What an awesome experience! Packed house. Cameron Crazies were awesome. We were up pretty high, but still had a great view. Really cool experience with my son, to be honest! Would recommend a game there, if you get a chance.
 

reckrider

Ramblin' Wreck
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Suwanee Georgia
My son graduates from a small college in Tennessee this May. As an early graduation gift, I took him to Cameron today for the game against Virginia. He’s a Duke fan 🤮. What an awesome experience! Packed house. Cameron Crazies were awesome. We were up pretty high, but still had a great view. Really cool experience with my son, to be honest! Would recommend a game there, if you get a chance.
Great story. Thanks.
 

slugboy

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Staff member
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13,979
Maybe we and/or the ACC need to strike a deal with private equity (like the Big Ten) or heck, even go after that Saudi money.
I know multiple people who were C-level execs or above on companies bought by private equity. Every one of them told a personal story of watching a company gutted and left much weaker after several years of PE investment. The house always wins, and the PE firms are the house.

There’s a reason you can’t find a ToysRUs, Joann, Big Lots, Sports Authority, or Payless shoe store any more. InstantPot was something you couldn’t possibly screw up, and now it’s screwed up. Red Lobster lost tons of money selling endless shrimp thanks to the PE firm making them buy their shrimp at a higher price from a shrimp company they owned an interest in—that and other practices drove Red Lobster into bankruptcy.

Payday loans and title loan companies may have better success stories. (ok, that’s hyperbole, but I’m not even sure if it’s really not true)

If you were joking, you gotta put gifs and sarcasm around the post.
 

MtnWasp

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2,286
If you were joking, you gotta put gifs and sarcasm around the post.
What would be safer than exploring private equity would be visiting Vinnie & Marco in their office above the Barber Shop and borrowing money from them. Their interest rates are higher but their contracts are more forgiving.
Opinion Journal: Go Ahead, Drop That F-Bomb
 

cpf2001

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2,768
I really don’t understand how you sell your principals at a PE firm on “hey, we should invest in college sports, that’s gonna be the move” when so many programs already have so much debt.

The Big10 move makes the most sense - “let’s try to make a winner even more of a winner” - but the Utah deal seems insane. You think that’s where you’re gonna find big returns? Making Utah a household brand?
 

kg01

Get-Bak! Coach
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Atlanta
Yeesh, watching Duuk v NCSt. The Wolfpack plays some terrible basketball. I thought that Wade guy was a 'strong a** coach'?
 

Techster

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20,061
I know multiple people who were C-level execs or above on companies bought by private equity. Every one of them told a personal story of watching a company gutted and left much weaker after several years of PE investment. The house always wins, and the PE firms are the house.

There’s a reason you can’t find a ToysRUs, Joann, Big Lots, Sports Authority, or Payless shoe store any more. InstantPot was something you couldn’t possibly screw up, and now it’s screwed up. Red Lobster lost tons of money selling endless shrimp thanks to the PE firm making them buy their shrimp at a higher price from a shrimp company they owned an interest in—that and other practices drove Red Lobster into bankruptcy.

Payday loans and title loan companies may have better success stories. (ok, that’s hyperbole, but I’m not even sure if it’s really not true)

If you were joking, you gotta put gifs and sarcasm around the post.

I have a company that competes in a space private equity has taken over. One of the best things that happened for my business. They have driven away labor talent, increased prices, and the quality of service has plummeted. All they care about is the bottom line and they continue to think that they can compensate for an eroding customer base by increasing prices to make up for it. I continue to encourage them to think that way.

It's a story that repeats itself in Private Equity. They buy out successful businesses, roll it up with other companies they've acquired in the same sector, and think they can name their price...while the customers suffer. They look at their needed returns, and have bean counters who don't understand the business chip away at what made the business successful to meet those returns until it's no longer a successful business.

Greed cuts both ways. GT needs to stay as far away from Private Equity as possible. It may seem like PE is helping at first, but at the end of the day, you'll find they've gutted you and it's too late to turn it around.
 

Peacone36

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12,629
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Maine
Syracuse is doing things.

They named a new Chancellor today. The school looked primed to hire Heather Lyke as AD (formerly of Pitt) but now a complaint has surfaced about her. They are revamping the football staff following a 3-9 season as well.

They are shaking things up in the land of Orange.
 

gte447f

Helluva Engineer
Messages
1,932
Does this feel like a slippery slope that could go terribly wrong to anyone else?

Aligning yourself so prominently with corporate America can bring a lot of unintended baggage.
Sure, maybe, but what did you expect? All I’ve heard since NIL became a thing is how since GT is in Atlanta fortune 500s like Coke, Delta, Home Depot should be lining up to sponsor our little sports clubs.
 
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