So if this happens, and with the current ABC/ESPN contract, the TV payout per school will be about $15 million. Then you toss in Bowl game and NCAA revenue on top of that, it starts pushing $20 million per school.
http://www.kansascity.com/2011/04/11/2794104/hot-t opics-for-college-sports.html
By BLAIR KERKHOFF
The Kansas City Star
Posted on Mon, Apr. 11, 2011 11:26 PM
5. Big 12 TV contract
Lips are sealed at the Big 12 office, but word leaked from industry analysts has Fox paying $90 million annually for 13 years. If that’s in the ballpark for the conference’s second-tier rights, the deal is enormous and would work as an adhesive for keeping the Big 12 together.
No more talk about making Texas A&M whole with its $20 million guarantee, even if that meant giving a lower percentage of income to the smaller-budget programs.
With this deal, media-rights money would equal or surpass the income of Big Ten and Southeastern Conference schools because it would be added to the $60 million annually the Big 12 receives from ABC and ESPN for first-tier games.
The Big 12 would prefer to have its contracts for first- and second-tier games aligned, but that’s not the case. The ABC/ESPN deal expires in 2015-16.
The media-rights income doesn’t include revenue from bowl games and the NCAA Tournament. Add it up, and the Big 12 becomes as financially healthy as any conference.
Also in the works: The schools other than Texas and Oklahoma forming a network for mostly nonrevenue sports. Exposure, not revenue, will be the key here.