4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2003 ACC FROM PAGE 1 ACC and its efforts to make the conference a football powerhouse. “There’s a lot of uncertainty now,” Ballen said. “We don’t know what this is going to bring financially. We hope that it will be positive but we don’t know this for sure.” The expansion provides the ACC with a chance to place a second team in the Bowl Championship Series, which would result in the conference earning $l3 million. Plus, since the Hurricanes and Hokies are mainstays in college football’s top 25, more lucrative deals are sure to come. The ACC now can offer television networks 72 regular-season games to choose from instead of 54, as it does now. But the conference lost the cov eted New York media market when Syracuse was trimmed from the expansion plan. “That was really part of the issue we had fundamentally with the consultants' numbers and a sense of what schools and, ‘Could they bring the New York market?’” said Dick Baddour, UNC’s director of athlet ics. “Was it going to be enough to make up for the equal share? “If people are going to watch ACC football and basketball, we’ve certainly taken some risk of not having that market in the mix of our TV package.” The addition of Miami and Virginia Tech also means the con ference’s money must be divided among 11 schools instead of nine —a factor that could prove costly. The ACC already has taken at least one precautionary move: The conference gave each of its nine schools a record $9.7 million last year for recovery in case predicted financial scenarios don’t pan out. The schools in favor of expan sion apparently were willing to take the risk and made it known The Agora Introducing Granville Towers’ Brand-New Dining Room! Open House for All UNO Students Thursday, September 4 This is you. This is you serving your community and making new friends. Mm This is you being recognized for your good work.