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| Wednesday, August 14 Size matters in the Big Ten By Darren Rovell ESPN.com |
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In college football, bigger is better. But it's not only the average weight of offensive lines that are ballooning beyond the burly 300 mark. Team media guides are bulging, too.
Call it page envy. "We'd be kidding ourselves if we said that we take pride in having the smallest media guide in the Big Ten," said Tom Schott, Purdue's sports information director, who started the push for more statistics and pages in 1999. "In 1998, we walked into Big Ten Media Day and someone said, 'Well, at least Northwestern's is smaller than yours.' " Since then, Purdue's media guides have grown from 188 pages to 204, 256, 308 and now 352 pages this season -- all without an increase in font size. Certainly, thanks to the team's winning ways in recent seasons, Purdue has more to boast about than just the size of its media guide. Together, they become an effective tool to lure recruits to the burgeoning Big Ten power. "Although a lot of high-profile recruits don't have time to read it all, we think it closes the gap with the Michigans and Notre Dames of the world," Schott said. "It's certainly a bit of an arms race to see who can have the largest and heaviest one." Aside from weight and size, there's not much schools can do to give them an advantage besides a fancy cover. According to NCAA bylaws, media guides can use color only on the front and back covers, reducing the recruiting advantages for schools that have heftier budgets. So until the NCAA limits the number of pages, which Schott says could come soon as a result of cost containment issues, the books keep getting bigger and bigger.
The push for size is one of the reasons why schools have been selling their media guides. Purdue, which has its books printed for about $5 a piece, hopes to sell 500 of them at $15 apiece this year. That's relatively inexpensive considering that many schools, including Georgia (416) and Maryland (248), are charging $20 this season. Despite the Longhorn's 576-page media guide, not everything is bigger in Texas. Texas' guide sells for $21.65, tax included, a bargain next to Marshall's 348-page guide. Still, the Mid-American Conference power tops the list of most expensive media guides at a whopping $25. "We're just hoping we can sell enough that we can recoup some of the money," said Ricky Hazel, Marshall's sports information director.
In case you haven't heard ...
The school has printed a caricature of Coker onto T-shirts, but have they have decided not to make a version using Dorsey or Johnson. Last year, the school had a problem when the Nike tag on the inside of the Miami No. 11 jersey said "Dorsey" on it. "They used it to track the sales of the jerseys, but we took care of it pretty quickly," Prindiville said. Although his name was not on the back of the jersey itself, the school didn't want to violate NCAA bylaws, which prohibit the use of an athlete's name for the sale of a commercial product.
The Enron club
Timing is everything
Old Spice, a Proctor and Gamble brand, is currently running a print-ad campaign for Old Spice Cool Contact Wipes that appeared on the inside cover of last week's Sporting News. "This year, Tony Stewart will finally keep his cool," the ad boasts. Last year, Stewart was fined $10,000 and put on probation by NASCAR after he argued with a Winston Cup official and kicked a reporter's tape recorder under a truck. An Old Spice spokesman did not return calls seeking comment. Stewart won his third Winston Cup race of the season, Sunday at Watkins Glen. "It doesn't lift anything off my shoulders," Stewart said after the race. "It doesn't change anything I did last week. I'm still ashamed of what I did. "It's been a tough week for all of us. It's that way when you hurt your team and your sponsor."
Babe's bat to hit the market
Kohler bought the bat three weeks ago from an Orsatti family intermediary. It came complete with documentation, including articles in the Los Angeles Evening Herald and a telegram from Ruth. "If authenticators are looking for some weakness in the story, there is none," Kohler said. "This is the bat that built 'The house that Ruth built.' "At the very least, it's a beautiful piece of 1922 furniture and the signature on it is like it was put on a couple hours ago," said Dave Bushing, a collectibles expert who sold another Ruth bat that was given away in a 1924 Evening Herald contest for $250,000 last year. "If the Honus Wagner card went for more than $1 million, this should go for more than $1 million." A bat believed to be Shoeless Joe Jackson's prized "Black Betsy" sold for $577,610 in August 2001.
They leave home without it
Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said he paid "all cash" when he bought the team for a reported $280 million in January 2000. Cuban sold his company, Broadcast.com, to Yahoo! in April 1999 and sold all the stock six months later. "I never borrow money," Cuban said.
Slam dunk deals
Though memorabilia of broadcasters is usually hard to come by, more than 200 Hearn items have been posted on eBay on a daily basis over the past week. The most frequent item sold were Chick Hearn bobblehead dolls, 5,000 of which were distributed as part of a radio promotion after Hearn returned from his heart and hip surgery in April. While the bobbleheads have sold in the $75 to $125 range, items with Hearn's autograph, such as basketballs, jerseys and books, have been garnering bids of $500 or more.
Pay for play-by-play Darren Rovell, who covers sports business for ESPN.com, can be reached at Darren.rovell@espnpub.com
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