Agree that the ratings will be good, disagree that will necessarily mean an increase in TV contracts. The network-cable paradigm is continuing to shift and the networks are losing viewers/subscribers. The sports are valuable programing for them, but if they don't have the money to pay for the content, they can't pay it. (I know, you'll claim they can just "write it off"). The future, at least in the near-term, is likely a more fractured market with a combination of network, cable and online providers. Can they cobble together contracts to equal or exceed the reach of the current deals? Probably. Will the conferences be able to successfully identify what will be the dominant sources of streaming college football in three years to most efficiently get their share of that revenue? No one knows.
Well, I could maybe go that it won't be an increase, given harder times recently and perhaps ahead for the industry. But you sounded certain that it would be a decrease, so even staying flat would disprove what you were implying earlier.
No doubt that technology has been disruptive to TV the last 20 years. But to me, that has almost exclusively to do with distribution.
ESPN, FOX, CBS, NBC, aren't distribution. That's Comcast, Charter, AT&T (now), Dish ... and new to the game are YouTubeTV, Hulu, Apple. But those that are paying for the TV rights to the games are content creators. They don't really care how their content gets distributed, so long as they get paid.
And if there are many millions of homes demanding to watch the games, and ESPN/FOX have the rights to transmit a broadcast of those games live .... then we're just talking about who wants to be the middle-man. Someone will do it.
The whole thing boils down to this: conferences and CFP just want to get paid and have it come from one (ideally, maybe two) source(s). They don't necessarily care who, or how. Just want someone else to take care of it. And in turn, the networks (ESPN, FOX, etc.) just want to get paid and have it come from as few sources as possible. They don't necessarily care who, or how, their signals get distributed.
But those two pieces are set. And the demand is there at the end of the pipe. Therefore, I can't see how the middle-men can muck it up, as you're worried a bout.
Right now, we don't have enough fans to fill the seats at any of our revenue generating sports. There wasn't a waiting list of people hoping that existing ticket holders would drop season tickets to take their place and make the donations. Some of those existing ticket holders will not be back or not be in a position financially to continue the donations. Will they be able to replace them? No one knows.
Don't disagree with anything you say here. But I was only comment on getting back up to what we had in 2019.
Improving beyond that will largely depend on the continued success of the football team.