Texarkana Gazette

Eliminatio­n of nonconfere­nce games could have ripple effect

- By John Marshall

The Big Ten became the first Power Five league to shift to an all-conference fall schedule as the college sports world faces difficult decisions caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More Power Five conference­s could follow, causing a ripple effect on small-conference schools across the country.

If more big conference­s ditch nonconfere­nce games, smaller schools who rely on “buy games” to help fund their athletic department­s will take huge financial hits at a time when they’re already facing ugly bottom lines.

“It’s significan­t, to say the least,”

Northern Arizona athletic director Mike Marlow said Friday. “We’re fortunate in the state of Arizona to have both (Arizona State) and (Arizona) here and we have one or the other scheduled through 2029. That’s a significan­t part of our budget.”

The Big Ten announced Thursday it will eliminate all non-conference games in football and several other sports amid rising COVID-19 concerns. made

A conference-only schedule also allows schools to cut down on expenses at a time when athletic

department­s are facing massive budget constraint­s.

The cancellati­on of the NCAA Tournament left the NCAA to be $375 million short in revenue scheduled to be paid to its member schools and the pandemic has continued to exacerbate financial shortcomin­gs.

Stanford eliminated 11 of its 36 varsity sports this week to help shore up some of a projected $25 million budget shortfall and at least 171 sports programs at four-year schools have been cut during the pandemic.

The Pac-12 Conference is considerin­g a move to conference-only games and the other Power 5 conference­s are weighing their options

The Big Ten’s decision wipes out 33 non-conference football games against non-Power Five programs — nine more against Power Five opponents — with payouts ranging in the six figures to more than $1 million to the smaller schools.

Non-Power Five schools will collective­ly lose at least $110 million — possibly up to $150 million — in revenue from guaranteed payments by Power Five schools in a conference-only model, according to Dr. Patrick Rishe, director of the sports business program at Washington University in St. Louis.

“I expect every conference will at least move towards fewer games. … and likely a conference-only model,” Dr. Rishe said. “If you reduce beyond that, what’s the point of conducting the sport in the fall? You’d be better off giving the spring a try and craft a conference-only spring schedule which can be contested in less time, less travel, etc.”

Northern Arizona has a scheduled payout of $518,000 for its Sept. 3 game at Arizona State, money that slated to be used for the football team’s 2020 travel expenses. Northern Arizona’s overall athletic budget is $21 million and already went through one round of budget reductions to prevent cutting sports.

Montana State has a $675,000 payout for a Sept. 12 game at Utah. Fresno State is due to make a combined $1.9 million for buy games against Colorado and Texas A&M this season.

Some schools could lose more than 5% of their entire athletic budgets if guarantee games are wiped off their schedules.

 ?? AP Photo/Teresa Walker via Zoom ?? ■ This image taken from video Friday shows Tennessee sophomore basketball player Josiah-Jordan James. The Big Ten decision to wipe more than three dozen nonconfere­nce football games off the schedule this year has sent a ripple of fear through athletic department­s across much of the country.
AP Photo/Teresa Walker via Zoom ■ This image taken from video Friday shows Tennessee sophomore basketball player Josiah-Jordan James. The Big Ten decision to wipe more than three dozen nonconfere­nce football games off the schedule this year has sent a ripple of fear through athletic department­s across much of the country.

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