Big bucks in SEC takeover
Barring a dramatic change of direction, Texas and Oklahoma are moving toward taking the Red River Rivalry to the Southeastern Conference in a seismic shift that will have repercussions in college sports from coast to coast.
According to multiple reports, the first and very significant formal step of the process could come as soon as Monday with the two schools informing the Big 12 they will not renew the contractual agreement that binds conference members until 2025.
After that, lawyers can take over. An early departure by Texas and Oklahoma could cost the schools more than $100 million combined to get out of that grant of rights.
But a pot of gold awaits in the SEC and having the Longhorns and Sooners linger as lame ducks doesn’t have much upside for the Big 12.
There is a good chance that come kickoff of the 2022 college football season, Texas and Oklahoma will be in the Southeastern Conference.
It just means more money:
The SEC signed a new $300 million deal with ESPN last year that gives the network rights to all SEC football games starting in 2024 and is expected to bump the conference’s annual distribution to its members to about $68 million. The Big 12 distributed $34.5 million per school recently, down over the previous year because of the pandemic.
A projection done by Navigate Research, which does data modeling for professional sports leagues and college conferences, for The Athletic last year had the annual distribution gap between the SEC and Big 12 at about $16 million per team per year in the SEC’S favor by 2026.
That was under the assumption the Big 12 would still have Texas and Oklahoma. The Big 12’s next TV deal will pay substantially less without its flagship schools than the $574 million in 2026 Navigate was projecting.
CFP expansion: SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey was part of a four-person group, along with Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby, that worked on College Football Playoff expansion for about two years.
The plan calls for a 12-team field. There are steps to go before formal approval, but implementation could come as soon as 2023. Those with a background in college sports believe it was no coincidence that Sankey was working on both CFP and SEC expansion.
“People have tried to say, ‘Why now?”’ former Western Athletic Conference and Sun Belt Commissioner Karl Benson said. “If there’s a different structure and if the SEC going to 16 teams is going to create a different structure among its peer conferences, you need to do it before the next CFP expansion.”
The current CFP expansion proposal calls for the six top-ranked conference champions to make the 12-team field, along with six at-large picks by the selection committee.
The SEC is about to add the only Big 12 school to make the playoff and the only other Big 12 school to win a national championship since the conference was formed in 1994. Texas and OU will have a more treacherous path to the CFP in the SEC, but more roads are opening up.