Lawmaker suggests deporting those keeping Clemson-S.C. game off air
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Posted 5:47PM on Thursday, November 10, 2005
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) For the first time in almost two decades, the showdown between South Carolina and Clemson won't be broadcast on national or regional television. And one state lawmaker has a suggestion for those responsible: deport 'em.<br>
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``I'm in total disbelief. I think this might be illegal,'' said state Rep. John Graham Altman, R-Charleston.<br>
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``We need to deport the people who made this decision to Guantanamo Bay. I may very well introduce a bill to do just that,'' he said, a reflection of how seriously people in the state take the Carolina-Clemson game.<br>
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``I'll say this, Jefferson-Pilot has done something I didn't think was possible, and that is to unite Clemson and South Carolina fans this close to the game,'' Altman added.<br>
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The only way fans will be able to see the Nov. 19 game on pay-per-view.<br>
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``It basically came down to showing the game on pay-per-view or not showing it at all,'' said Liz McMillan, general manager of Gamecock Sports Properties, which along with Learfield Sports Communications own the broadcast rights. ``I think this is the best option for the fans.''<br>
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CBS, ESPN and Jefferson-Pilot, along with the Southeastern Conference, control which games are televised each week. CBS selected the Auburn vs. Alabama game while ESPN went with LSU and Mississippi.<br>
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Jefferson-Pilot chose to go with a split regional broadcast of the Tennessee-Vanderbilt and Georgia-Kentucky games.<br>
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``Jefferson-Pilot is contractually obligated to show games that involve two SEC teams,'' said SEC associate commissioner Charles Bloom. ``All of these policies come from the networks.''<br>
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South Carolina then had three choices. Either not show the game, show it only in Columbia and Greenville, the team's home markets, or show it on pay-per-view.<br>
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``The pay-per-view was really South Carolina's best option,'' Bloom said.<br>
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The 7 p.m. kickoff was also dictated by pay-per-view telecast, South Carolina athletics spokesman Steve Fink said.<br>
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He said the school couldn't broadcast the game during the day, because it would conflict with other scheduled SEC broadcasts.<br>
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Information from: The Post and Courier, http://www.charleston.net<br>
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(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)