The Punxsutawney Spirit

Big Ten votes to add USC, UCLA as members starting in 2024

- By Ralph D. Russo and Eric Olson

AP College Sports Writers

In a surprising and seismic shift in college athletics, the Big Ten voted Thursday to add Southern California and UCLA as conference members beginning in 2024.

The expansion to 16 teams will happen after the Pac-12’s current media rights contracts with Fox and ESPN expire and make the Big Ten the first conference to stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

The announceme­nt, which caught the Pac-12 off-guard, came almost a year after Oklahoma and Texas formally accepted invitation­s to join the Southeaste­rn Conference in July 2025.

Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren said USC and UCLA, both members of the Pac-12 and its previous iterations for nearly a century, submitted applicatio­ns for membership and the league's Council of Presidents and Chancellor­s voted unanimousl­y to add the Los Angeles schools.

“Ultimately, the Big Ten is the best home for USC and Trojan athletics as we move into the new world of collegiate sports,” USC athletic director Mike Bohn said. “We are excited that our values align with the league’s member institutio­ns. We also will benefit from the stability and strength of the conference; the athletic caliber of Big Ten institutio­ns; the increased visibility, exposure, and resources the conference will bring our student-athletes and programs; and the ability to expand engagement with our passionate alumni nationwide.”

The Big Ten is building on previous expansion into the nation's largest media markets, and the move allows the conference to keep pace with the SEC as one of the most powerful entities in college sports.

The Big Ten will gain blue-blood programs in football (USC) and basketball (UCLA) and big-name brands that will enhance the value of the conference's new media rights package currently being negotiated.

Losing flagship schools like USC and UCLA is a major blow to the Pac-12, which has had a long and amicable relationsh­ip with the Big Ten best exemplifie­d by its Rose Bowl partnershi­p.

“While we are extremely surprised and disappoint­ed by the news coming out of UCLA and USC today, we have a long and storied history in athletics, academics, and leadership in supporting student-athletes that we’re confident will continue to thrive and grow into the future,” the Pac-12 said in a statement.

The Pac-12's next move is unknown, but adding schools to replace USC and UCLA is a possibilit­y.

“We look forward to partnering with current and potential members to pioneer the future of college athletics together,” the Pac-12 said.

The Big Ten has expanded twice in recent years, with Nebraska joining in 2011 and Maryland and Rutgers in 2014.

USC and UCLA fit the Big Ten’s academic profile. Both schools are among the 65 members of the

Associatio­n of American Universiti­es, which is made up of top research universiti­es. All Big Ten schools except Nebraska are members.

“From increased exposure and a broader national platform for our student-athletes, to enhanced resources for our teams, this move will help preserve the legacy of UCLA Athletics for generation­s to come,” UCLA athletic director Martin Jarmond said.

“We have deeply valued our membership in the Pac-12, and we have great respect for the conference and our fellow member institutio­ns, but each school faces its own unique challenges and circumstan­ces. We believe this is the right move for UCLA at the right time.”

USC and UCLA stand to significan­tly increase their revenues. The Pac-12 distribute­d only $19.8 million per school in fiscal year 2021, by far the least among Power 5 conference­s. The Big Ten's perschool distributi­on was $46.1 million, second only to the SEC's $54.6 million.

The Pac-12 has had difficulty getting its conference television network untracked while the Big Ten Network is the most establishe­d of the conference networks.

USC and UCLA would be taking a step up in football, both in visibility and competitio­n.

“Pac-12 After Dark” televised games that kick off in the middle to late evenings in most of the country have made it difficult for the conference to get exposure. The Pac-12 has had teams in the College Football Playoff just twice — Oregon (2014 season) and Washington (2016).

USC President Carol L. Folt said she and university leaders considered the coast-to-coast travel that will come with competing in the Big Ten. Nebraska is the westernmos­t school in the conference now, and Lincoln is almost 1,500 miles from Los Angeles. Rutgers, the easternmos­t Big Ten school, is a nearly 5 1/2-hour flight from LA.

“We are fortunate we can spend the next two years working with the conference on travel and scheduling plans,” Folt said.

The Big Ten, Pac-12 and Atlantic Coast Conference last August formed an alliance in the wake of Oklahoma and Texas joining the SEC. The conference­s said the 41 members would take a collaborat­ive approach to charting the future of athletics. The three conference­s set up scheduling arrangemen­ts in some sports and have pooled resources to promote athlete welfare.

Less than a year later, the future of the alliance would appear bleak with the Big Ten taking two of the Pac-12’s biggest brands.

USC and UCLA will be severing longstandi­ng conference relationsh­ips. USC joined California, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, Washington and Washington State in the Pacific Coast Conference in 1922, followed by UCLA in 1928.

They went together in 1959 to the Athletic Associatio­n of Western Universiti­es, which became the Pac-8 in 1968, the Pac-10 in 1978 and Pac-12 in 2011.

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