BleedGopher
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 62,125
- Reaction score
- 18,623
- Points
- 113
Per Zach:
-- But more than that, Minnesota is not really a football team anymore. It's a media property that happens to play football. Football is now content and subscriptions pay the bills.
As such, it makes more financial sense to put (part of) spring ball behind a paywall.
Minnesota will hold two practices open to members of the public. One, on April 11, will be open to the public and the other, on Saturday, will be open exclusively to members of Minnesota's Dinkytown Athletes collective.
"Being able to have our fans understand the changing of college football. We have a Dinkytown Athletes practice that will be open to Dinkytown members. I urge our fans to be a part of Dinkytown Athletes, which is going to give you a chance to be part of more things that we do. As college football changes, we have to continue to adapt as a university as well to fit that change. Just as some of (the media) have exclusive members, different things you can only look at (if you subscribe), it's the same thing -- to urge more people to be a part of Dinkytown Athletes the best we possibly can."
Dinkytown Athletes offers five membership tiers, ranging from Club ($10 a month/$110 a year) to Champions ($500 a month/$5,500 a year). All membership tiers provide access to exclusive events, but All-American and Champion members buy themselves "complimentary" access to exclusive events, which implies the three lower tiers have bought themselves the opportunity to buy their way into practice.
If Saturday's practice is successful in driving membership, here's betting that Minnesota has held its last spring game, and other programs will soon make their spring practices and even games -- err, content -- available only to their subscribers.
Go Gophers!!
-- But more than that, Minnesota is not really a football team anymore. It's a media property that happens to play football. Football is now content and subscriptions pay the bills.
As such, it makes more financial sense to put (part of) spring ball behind a paywall.
Minnesota will hold two practices open to members of the public. One, on April 11, will be open to the public and the other, on Saturday, will be open exclusively to members of Minnesota's Dinkytown Athletes collective.
"Being able to have our fans understand the changing of college football. We have a Dinkytown Athletes practice that will be open to Dinkytown members. I urge our fans to be a part of Dinkytown Athletes, which is going to give you a chance to be part of more things that we do. As college football changes, we have to continue to adapt as a university as well to fit that change. Just as some of (the media) have exclusive members, different things you can only look at (if you subscribe), it's the same thing -- to urge more people to be a part of Dinkytown Athletes the best we possibly can."
Dinkytown Athletes offers five membership tiers, ranging from Club ($10 a month/$110 a year) to Champions ($500 a month/$5,500 a year). All membership tiers provide access to exclusive events, but All-American and Champion members buy themselves "complimentary" access to exclusive events, which implies the three lower tiers have bought themselves the opportunity to buy their way into practice.
If Saturday's practice is successful in driving membership, here's betting that Minnesota has held its last spring game, and other programs will soon make their spring practices and even games -- err, content -- available only to their subscribers.
Go Gophers!!