Big Spring Herald Weekend

Moves by Texas, Oklahoma from Big 12 to SEC bumped to 2024

- By JIM VERTUNO

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas and Oklahoma are heading to the Southeaste­rn Conference in 2024, a year earlier than originally planned, after Big 12 officials cleared the way Thursday for the storied programs to exit their league.

Texas and Oklahoma will leave behind the $50 million each school would have received over the next two seasons under the Big 12's media contracts.

Big 12 Commission­er Brett Yormak said the league would only agree to an early departure “if it was in our best interest.”

“By reaching this agreement, we are now able to accelerate our new beginning as a 12team league and move forward in earnest with our initiative­s and future planning,” Yormak said in a statement announcing the agreement.

BYU, Central Florida, Cincinnati and Houston are joining the Big 12 prior to the 2023 football season, giving the league a temporary membership of 14 schools.

The agreement must still be approved the Texas and Oklahoma boards of regents, but that is considered a formality.

SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey said in a statement that the schools will become full members of the conference on July 1, 2024.

“We are continuing our preparatio­n for this membership transition, and we look forward to welcoming the conference's new members and moving into our future as a 16-team league,” Sankey said.

The moves by Texas and Oklahoma have been in the works since 2021, when the SEC invited the Big 12's marquee programs to join what is already the strongest football conference in the country.

Oklahoma and Texas have combined for 10 national championsh­ips as determined by The Associated Press, but none since the Longhorns' 2005 season championsh­ip. TCU, which made it the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game last season, joined Oklahoma as the only Big 12 teams to make the playoff.

Big 12 officials were initially stunned by the departure. Former Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby even accused ESPN of trying to “destabiliz­e” the league to help Texas and Oklahoma leave early.

Thursday's announceme­nt was much more cordial. Texas Tech President

Lawrence Schovanec, who is also the chairman of the Big 12 Board of Directors, called the agreement “fair to all parties,” and said it could not have happened without collaborat­ion with the league's broadcast partners ESPN and Fox.

Money has been a driving factor in the shifting landscape of college athletics realignmen­t. The SEC reported a revenue distributi­on of $49.9 million per school for the 2021-2022 school year, exceeding by more than $7 million what the Big 12 distribute­d to its members for the same period.

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