facebook-pixel

Pac-12 leaders hear media deal’s details, but no vote to accept terms as future remains murky

The meeting comes just days after Colorado decided not to wait and see what Kliavkoff could deliver and announced it would re-join the Big 12 in 2024.

(Ralph Freso | AP) The Pac-12 logo is shown at Sun Devil Stadium during the second half of an NCAA college football game between Arizona State and Kent State in Tempe, Ariz. Pac-12 leaders were briefed on the details of a new media rights deal Tuesday, but did not vote on whether to accept it.

Pac-12 leaders hear details of media deal, but no vote to accept terms as league future stays murky

By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer

Pac-12 leaders were presented details of a long-awaited media rights deal Tuesday by Commissioner George Kliavkoff. A person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press that the meeting concluded without voting on whether to accept the terms by the nine remaining Pac-12 schools. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the Pac-12 was not making its internal discussions public, and gave no further details about prospective network or streaming partners nor the value. The meeting comes just days after Colorado decided not to wait and see what Kliavkoff could deliver and announced it would re-join the Big 12 in 2024.


With speculation swirling about the future of the Pac-12, Commissioner George Kliavkoff presented details of a long-awaited media rights deal to league stakeholders who concluded Tuesday’s meeting without voting on whether to accept the terms, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press.

The meeting comes just days after Colorado decided not to wait and see what Kliavkoff could deliver and announced it would re-join the Big 12 in 2024 while USC and UCLA are leaving at the same time for the Big Ten. With nine members still committed to trying to stick it out, the media rights deal could make or break the Pac-12.

The person discussed the meeting with AP on the condition of anonymity because the Pac-12 is not making its internal discussion public, and gave no details about prospective network or streaming partners nor the value. ESPN reported the deal would make Apple’s online streaming service, Apple TV, the primary home of Pac-12 football games, and the total value would be dependent on the numbers of subscriptions purchased.

For compaison, Major League Soccer, the 29-team league in the U.S. and Canada, is in the first year of an exclusive 10-year deal with Apple TV that pays $250 million annually. Top-tier college football is generally considered a more valuable television property than MLS.

Two people familiar with the meeting called it a “positive and productive” session, but told AP another meeting with Pac-12 presidents, chancellors and athletic directors, was not immediately scheduled.

The Arizona Board of Regents, which controls both Arizona and fellow Pac-12 school Arizona State, scheduled a meeting later Tuesday, though it was unclear whether conference affiliation and the media rights deal would be on the agenda. Arizona President Robert C. Robbins has multiple times stated his desire to have Arizona stay in the Pac-12 while making it clear that staying put also needs to make financial sense.

Wildcats coach Jedd Fisch told reporters Tuesday he has been meeting with parents of players to assure them Arizona’s future will be secure.

“We’re in a position where people want us,” Fisch said, adding he expects a decision on conference affiliation soon.

Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark has been blunt about the conference’s desire to expand West, with Pac-12 schools as obvious expansion targets. Arizona has been considered the most likely to jump, along with Arizona State and Utah; Colorado made its decision last week.

The Big 12 agreed last fall to a six-year extension on its media right deal with ESPN and Fox that will pay each school about $32 million per year. That deal has not been officially announced, but it set a measuring stick for the Pac-12 in its pursuit of an agreement many hope will keep the league together for at least another five or six years.

The remaining Pac-12 members have been steadfast in wanting to see what kind of a deal Kliavkoff can land..

That became more challenging last fall when the Big 12 jumped in and agreed to an extension almost two years before its current deals expire. That seemed to limit the Pac-12′s options, with ESPN and Fox having less of need for the conference’s content — a need that would decrease further if the Big 12 had more teams in the Mountain and Pacific time zones.

Adding Arizona, Arizona State and Utah to go with Colorado would accomplish that goal for the Big 12. All those schools have said their preference to is remain in the Pac-12 — if Kliavkoff delivers.

Oregon and Washington are the conference’s remaining most notable brands. After the Big Ten added USC and UCLA there was speculation the Ducks and Huskies could be next, though new Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti has tried to tamp down talk of further expansion.

Northern California schools Stanford and California, both elite academic institutions, might be of some interest to the Big Ten. They also have similar profiles to several Atlantic Coast Conference schools, but are nowhere near any of them.

Oregon State and Washington State seem most in danger of being left out of a so-called power conference altogether.

The Pac-12 has already reached out to San Diego State and SMU about possibly joining the conference as replacements for USC and UCLA, but first the current members must decide if they want to stick around.