USA TODAY US Edition

New Pac-12 boss plans to fight for 2 schools remaining

- Brent Schrotenbo­er

As the new person in charge of the Pac-12 Conference, Commission­er Teresa Gould started her first day on the job Friday with a clear sense of what she must do next.

Her once-proud league will shrink from 12 to two members later this year – Washington State and Oregon State.

But then what? What exactly is her mission as the commission­er of a twoteam league?

Gould noted there are hundreds of student-athletes remaining at the two leftover Pac-12 schools at a time of transforma­tive turbulence in college sports.

“All I could think about was they need a leader that is prepared to fight for them, a leader that’s prepared to fight on their behalf,” Gould said during an online news conference Thursday. “And I want to be that leader.“

So many uncertaint­ies in the Pac-12 still remain after the latest wave of college football realignmen­t essentiall­y left these two schools shipwrecke­d in the Pacific Northwest.

But Gould, a former deputy commission­er of the Pac-12, was hired to take charge for several reasons. One was that she had “great ideas for the future where she would like to take our conference in sort of this rebuilding mode we find ourselves in,” Washington State President Kirk Schulz said Thursday.

What is the future of the Pac-12?

Even though it will have only two teams, the Pac-12 will still exist as the Pac-12 brand. It won’t be called the Pac-2, at least not officially.

“Starting July 1, as we continue as a two-member conference, we are the Pac-12 Conference, and we’re gonna continue to be the Pac-12 conference,” said Gould, who becomes the first female commission­er of a Power Five conference. “That brand means something nationally. It means something in our footprint on the West Coast. It means something to our fan base. So we will continue to own the name, the logo and intellectu­al property.”

But the Pac-12 will not be allowed to continue with two members indefinite­ly. Gould has a two-year contract for a reason.

What are rules and options for the Pac-12?

The 10 other members of the Pac-12 are leaving this summer to chase more money and stability in other leagues based in other sides of the country – the Big Ten, Big 12 and Atlantic Coast Conference­s. Oregon State and Washington State weren’t invited and instead were orphaned in the realignmen­t wreckage.

Under NCAA rules, leagues in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n are required to have at least eight members. But if a league falls short of that, the NCAA also allows a two-year grace period. That means the two schools left in the Pac-12 have two years to figure out what to do.

Ideally, they’d probably like to join one of those other Power Four leagues. If not, they could combine with the Mountain West Conference to form a Pac-14. or new Pac-12 with 14 members. The two leagues made an agreement last December that says they will negotiate the “consummati­on, as promptly as reasonably practicabl­e, of a definitive transactio­n pursuant to which all MWC Member Institutio­ns join Pac-12 as Pac-12 member institutio­ns with no MWC Exit Fee payable by any MWC Member Institutio­n to MWC.”

“The invitation­s, if made, would be effective as of the 2025-2026 NCAA season or the 2026-2027 NCAA season,” says the agreement obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The agreement strongly discourage­s the Pac-12 from pursuing any merger with the Mountain West that involves anything less than all 12 Mountain West teams. For example, if the Pac-12 invited 10 MWC teams instead of all 12, it would owe the Mountain West a withdrawal fee of $122.5 million. That stipulatio­n also remains active two years beyond the agreement expiration date of August 2025 or August 2026 (if extended).

Is it certain the Pac-12 will combine with the Mountain West Conference?

No. It’s just an option. Gould said Thursday that discussion­s haven’t even begun on that and that she wants to stay open-minded about what the league becomes beyond 2026.

“We are very much in the infancy stages of talking about what happens beyond 2026,” Gould said. “We are not discussing one model or one option. We’re looking at many and having a lot of different discussion­s about what that format and access looks like, how that revenue will be shared.”

In the meantime, Oregon State and Washington State will fill part of their football schedules with six games each against Mountain West Conference opponents and will compete as affiliate members of the West Coast Conference in basketball and other sports.

Shulz said it’s important to show appreciati­on to those leagues and not act like they’re looking to abandon them the first chance they get.

“Those conference­s know that we have a multiyear window here where there’s gotta be some final landing spot for those two schools, and so I just think we’ve got to keep communicat­ions open back and forth," he said. “We’ve got to make sure that we don’t sort of … come strutting in there thinking we’re just better than everybody else because of where we were before. We’ll end up getting our ass kicked if that happens.”

What about the Pac-12 Networks and TV rights?

Oregon State and Washington State also now control Pac-12 assets and future revenue after fighting a court battle with the departing membership and winning control of the Pac-12 governing board. That includes revenue from the College Football Playoff and Rose Bowl.

The Pac-12 Networks will go dark at the end of June, the league confirmed. But its studio in San Ramon, California, will stay up and running for at least the 2024-25 academic year in service of the two remaining Pac-12 schools.

In the meantime, the two remaining Pac-12 schools still are looking for a partner to televise their home football games and provide revenue to the league. Gould said she was encouraged by the interest in it.

 ?? JAMES SNOOK/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A Washington State fan holds up a Pac-2 sign during the football game against Oregon State in September.
JAMES SNOOK/USA TODAY SPORTS A Washington State fan holds up a Pac-2 sign during the football game against Oregon State in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States