Imperial Valley Press

Pac-12 will test shorter halftime, reduced TV timeouts

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Pac-12 will shorten halftime and reduce the number of commercial breaks during its non-conference schedule this season as part of a trial program to reduce the length of its football games.

Halftime will be 15 minutes long, cut down from the usual 20-minute break.

The number of commercial breaks will be reduced and they will be shorter in length, Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott said Wednesday.

Scott announced the initiative as the Pac-12 kicked off its media days in Hollywood. The experiment is intended to shorten ballooning game times in an era of up-tempo offenses running more plays and the increased scoring that comes with it.

“Just because metrics show robust ratings and attendance doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be experiment­ing and piloting with formats that will keep the sport attractive,” Scott said. “It’s incumbent on us to look at the presentati­on of the sport and make sure the pace of play is moving as much as possible and without changing the fundamenta­ls of the game.”

Scott did not completely dismiss potential rule changes in the future to address the length of games, saying that the upcoming experiment was part of a larger, more comprehens­ive review.

Scott noted that Pac-12 games have averaged nearly 3 hours and 30 minutes, more than 30 minutes longer than NFL games. Some of that discrepanc­y can be attributed to stopping the clock after first downs in college football, a rule not used in the NFL.

The halftime reduction could be a significan­t incentive to keep television viewers tuned in. Scott said up to 30 percent of the audience is lost during that break.

The changes could also have a positive effect on stadium attendance since Pac-12 fans have complained about the increase in late starts under the conference’s most recent television deal.

Fans might be more likely to watch a game in-person on a Thursday or Saturday night if they have a chance to get home before midnight.

For Arizona and Arizona State, which hold their early-season home games after dark to avoid the desert heat, it could mean their fans spend less time in triple-digit temperatur­es.

Pac-12 coaches consulted about the change did not believe it would hinder their ability to make adjustment­s at halftime, Scott said.

“I was delighted to hear our coaches feel like 20 minutes is more than they need from a student-athlete health and rest and X’s and O’s perspectiv­e,” Scott said.

Scott also announced the league’s plans to operate a centralize­d replay center, joining other conference­s in consolidat­ing its video review facilities.

The Pac-12 title game will stay at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, through 2019, Scott said. The league also has the option to hold the 2020 game in Santa Clara.

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