The Longhorns would be able to keep all of their revenue if that amount is greater than one-sixteenth of what the entire Pac-12 receives… Source: Waco Tribune-Herald
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Texas, Oklahoma, others nearing superconference deal with Pac-12
Filed under News by on Sep 19th, 2011. Comment.
Texas would have to add Pac-12 (soon to be 16) content to the [Longhorn Network] programming. The Longhorns would be able to keep all of their revenue from the network. However, if one-sixteenth of the money the Pac-12 receives… Source: Examiner.com
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Major compromise close, Texas to Pac-12 gaining traction
Filed under Football, News by on Sep 18th, 2011. Comment.
Every opponent that beats the Longhorns gets an hour of daily programming on the ESPN -created Longhorn network and keeps the revenue generated from that hour. 2. Alabama … Source: Memphis Commercial Appeal
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2011 college football preview by Ron Higgins
Filed under Football, News by on Aug 28th, 2011. Comment.
They’re better than everyone. So they created their own. And what does A & M get for playing the Longhorns in that arrangement? Nothing. So one school rigs the system to keep the revenue for all of its games, but others gain nothing… Source: Oregon Live
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Thank you Texas A & M, Texas may get what it deserves
Filed under News by on Aug 14th, 2011. Comment.
They’re better than everyone. So they created their own. And what does A & M get for playing the Longhorns in that arrangement? Nothing. So one school rigs the system to keep the revenue for all of its games, but others gain nothing… Source: Oregon Live
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Thank you Texas A & M, Texas may get what it deserves
Filed under News by on Aug 14th, 2011. Comment.
On to the vitals: TV Revenue Potential. Boston is the seventh largest TV market in the country. Now before you talk about the lack of interest in BC locally, remember that we are pursuing a BTN-like revenue model. There are a lot of households in New Eng Source: BC Interruption
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The Twelve Pack Conference Draft Profile: Boston College Eagles
Filed under News by on Jul 21st, 2011. Comment.
…as family and friends gathered…- 11:00 pm An Internal Revenue Service rule and threat of fines for Arkansas counties that don’t treat poll…- 11:00 pm COTTER Voters in the Cotter School District go to the polls today in a special election to… Source: Baxter Bulletin
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Filed under News by on May 10th, 2011. Comment.
It’s been a busy summer for Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott, who made a bold, but ultimately abortive move to create the first super-conference — a Pac-16 with Texas as the headlining new partner — but he still made big news when he expanded the conference to 12 teams with Utah and Colorado. But his work is far from done. He’s got to figure out how to divide the new conference into divisions. He’s got to figure out where and how he wants to play a conference championship game. And he’s got to then try to negotiate a blockbuster media deal that keeps the Pac-12 competitive with the other top BCS conferences going forward. While a lot of tough negotiations lay ahead — particularly over the divisions – he did have some answers this week. While he wouldn’t get pinned down definitively, it’s clear the conference will continue to play a nine-game conference schedule going forward and that there will be a conference championship game. Also: A Pac-10 network is going to get serious consideration. The football part of football is about to start cracking in earnest, but we wanted to check in with Scott and find out where things stand. So has life as the Pac-10 commissioner slowed down a bit or are things still as busy as this summer? Larry Scott : The summer is generally a slower time, but we’ve been very busy with preparations for the expanded conference. We’ve been actively working on divisional structure, looking at our revenue sharing arrangements, planning for a football championship game and continuing our preparatory work for our upcoming media negotiations. Those are the top priorities we’ve been focused on, as well as the regular business of getting ready for this season. It has been some weeks between the aspirations for a Pac-16 and the deal falling apart: Any perspective or lessons learned from that? LS : Nothing specifically. We feel good about the process. We got a lot of positive from it. We are thrilled with where we wound up. We’re excited about where the Pac 10 is going as the Pac-12. There’s been no looking back. Just excited about our future and our prospects. No real additional perspectives on it. What are the chances the Pac-12 will revisit expansion in the coming years? LS : It’s pretty impossible to predict what the timing could be around possible super-conferences discussions. I’ve said and believe that there will come a time when those conversations are picked up again, because the underlying fundamentals behind our vision and the plan we articulated had a lot of positive reaction and got a lot of traction. It came very close for good reasons. So if and when those conversations happen again, the Pac-12 will be very well-placed, and I’m sure will be in the mix. I couldn’t begin to predict what the timing of that might be, because it depends on factors outside our control. The biggest bit of intrigue on the table is how the Pac-12 will divide itself. Update us on that process: What is going on between now and the meetings in October? LS : We have a working group of athletic directors for football and senior women administrators for other sports looking at sports schedules on a sport-by-sport basis. So we are analyzing different models, talking about pros and cons, looking at different scenarios. And on a parallel track we are also discussing our revenue sharing arrangements, because how you divide divisions could have an impact based on our current model, which is appearance-based revenue sharing for football. We are very much on track against the timetable I laid out, where we’ve got several more rounds of discussions with our athletic directors. Ultimately the decision will be made by our board, which are our presidents and chancellors, at the end of October. I would describe the conversations as spirited and robust. I think there is a very healthy balance between institutions looking at the issues from an individual perspective, but I’ve been very impressed with the big-picture view the leadership of our schools is taking toward what is in the best interests of the conference long-term. I think there is a common view that that which is good for the conference will be best for each of the individual institutions long-term.

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Q&A with Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott
Filed under Football, News by on Sep 3rd, 2010. Comment.
So the Big East survived intact during this summer’s conference realignment craze. Great. Breathe a sigh of relief for the league. But the Big East still has issues to worry about. Topping the list is the growing revenue gap between it and the other power leagues. The conference shakeups simply made many of the rich richer. The Big Ten is handing out more than $20 million per team thanks to the Big Ten Network. The Big 12 gave sweetheart deals to Oklahoma and Texas that will allow those schools to make nearly that much. The Pac-10 is seeking a much bigger TV deal with Colorado and Utah added to the mix. The ACC reportedly doubled its previous media deal this spring. Meanwhile, the Big East’s current TV rights package lasts until 2013, and the league’s payout to its teams are being dwarfed by the other BCS conferences. Fanhouse’s Brett McMurphy has an excellent series this week looking at finances in college sports, and in one installment he lists the revenue generated from every BCS auto-bid conference team. The list should make Big East fans shudder. The numbers, based on the U.S. Department of Education’s Equity in Athletics report for the 2008-09 year, show that only five BCS teams failed to make a profit off their football teams for that year. Three of them — Rutgers, UConn and Syracuse — are from the Big East. (And the other two, Duke and Wake Forest, are not exactly the kind of powerhouse programs the Big East wants to emulate). The report says Rutgers broke even — and certainly, stadium expansion made a dent in the program’s expenses that year — while UConn lost $270,000 and Syracuse was $840,000 in the red. The Big East’s most profitable program was West Virginia, which ranked 28th overall at just over $13 million. The next league program on the list was Louisville at No. 45 ($7.43 million), followed by No. 52 Pitt ($5.57 million), No. 55 South Florida ($3.79 million) and No. 60 Cincinnati ($940,000 profit in a year in which the Bearcats made the Orange Bowl). Now compare those to the sport’s true big boys. Top dog Texas made a whopping $65 million, or more than twice as much as all the profitable Big East teams combined . Seven SEC schools rank in the Top 16, all at more than $20 million. Four Big Ten schools made more than $27 million each. Those dollar figures could get larger for the cream of the crop after conference realignment, while the Big East profit numbers will stay about the same for the next few years. The reasons are obvious; the bigger schools have larger stadiums and better TV deals. As I’ve noted before, no Big East team ranks in the top 30 of home attendance . Big East commissioner John Marinatto has said improving the league’s media rights fees is his top priority. He has hired former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue as a consultant in this area, and the conference is studying all options, including starting its own network or partnering with other entities for a sports-and-entertainment style channel. Big East teams should be commended for remaining as competitive as they are on the field despite the tremendous cash disparity. Doing more with less could be the league’s motto. But it’s clear that whether the league loses teams to other conferences in the future or maintains the status quo, it needs to find more ways to generate revenue

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Big East still faces big revenue gap
Filed under Football by on Jul 1st, 2010. Comment.
Those in the SEC are in the football beniss, and cousin, beniss is booming! With the recently concluded SEC spring meetings, it looks like the total take of the conference in revenue was $209 million last year and pay czar Mike Slive got to dole out $17 Source: Fanblogs.com College Football Blog
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SEC Revenue Disbursement: Status Quo or a Texas-Sized Hold-Up?
Filed under Football, News by on Jun 22nd, 2010. Comment.
