Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kliavkoff chasing miracle for Pac-12

- J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGH

LOS ANGELES — Late last July at Pac-12 media day, I met George Kliavkoff in the lobby of the W Hollywood, looking for a reason to be optimistic about the league’s future after Texas and Oklahoma bolted the Big 12 for the SEC.

The new commission­er provided it.

Kliavkoff, a bigtime executive at MGM Resorts, was an unknown in college sports circles, sure. But the hope was that his unique outsider’s perspectiv­e would help the Pac-12 stop playing from behind and operate more proactivel­y than reactively.

“I love it. I love the complexity,” Kliavkoff told me of the realignmen­t scenario. “It’s three-dimensiona­l chess, and it’s fun to play.”

At that moment, Kliavkoff was fielding calls from distressed members of the Big 12 who were hopeful to attach themselves to the West Coast’s Power Five conference. If he could have gazed into a crystal ball and glimpsed the events of June 30, 2022 — Southern Cal and UCLA stunningly announcing they were leaving the Pac-12 for the Big Ten starting in 2024 — Kliavkoff probably would not have turned down the likes of Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Baylor and Texas Christian.

Today, the Pac-12 is vulnerable to the poaching of better-positioned leagues. There’s an argument to be made the Big 12, which responded to losing Texas and Oklahoma by adding Brigham Young, Central Florida, Cincinnati and Houston, now offers more stability than the Pac-12.

Dennis Dodd of CBSSports.com reported Tuesday that the Big 12 is talking this week with Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah. The pitch to those schools — a few of which have publicly refuted Dodd’s report — would be that the Big 12 has a unified membership that already has accepted that the Big Ten and SEC will not be pursuing them in expansion efforts. In the Pac-12, proud programs like Oregon, Washington and Stanford are undeniably open for business and hoping to join USC and UCLA in earning a cut of the Big Ten’s $1 billion-plus media rights package.

Why would the rest of the Pac-12 stay committed when they can’t reasonably trust the other faces staring back at them during Zoom meetings?

Given the disparity in conference revenue distributi­on between his league and the Big Ten and SEC, Kliavkoff had to know there was a chance at the very least that USC — his lone blue-blood football program — could leave for a more lucrative home and that there would be nothing he could do to stop the Trojans.

Well, it happened, and UCLA left too. Now we will find out whether Kliavkoff can actually play chess.

“He’s good at navigating ambiguity, when you don’t know what the answer is but you know there’s a lot of disruption,” Beth Comstock, who brought Kliavkoff in as chief digital officer at NBC Universal around 2006, told me last summer. “That’s why we hired him at NBC. Out the other end came something that’s withheld the rest of time.”

That something she referred to is Hulu, the successful streaming platform. As I wrote last summer, “Kliavkoff’s past is packed with instances of making moves that seemed obvious to him and weren’t pursued as quickly by competitor­s.”

From this point on, keeping the Pac-12 from dissolving and getting the league in some form into a new media rights agreement would qualify as Kliavkoff’s crowning business achievemen­t.

He was dealt a losing hand from his predecesso­r, Larry Scott, and, by not pursuing expansion with the Big 12 schools last summer, he ended up losing more. Kliavkoff’s mistake was putting his faith in USC to stay loyal during an era of college sports in which there is no such thing as loyalty.

Surely he’s learned that lesson, which can only help him going forward. If Kliavkoff shows up to this year’s Pac-12 media day July 29 and the league still has 10 members publicly signed up for 2024 and beyond, I’ll call that an early victory.

Current TV partners ESPN and Fox will have an exclusive window to negotiate with the Pac-12, but let’s remember that those networks have been the driving force behind SEC and Big Ten expansion the last two summers. Their priority is not saving the Pac-12, which Fox just showed by seizing the Los Angeles market for its Big Ten negotiatio­ns.

It is long past time for Pac-12 leadership to show some cunning. A checkmate given the current look of the board would go down in history as Kliavkoff’s Miracle.

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