Morning Sun

Pac-12 facing uncertain future after losses to Big Ten

- By John Marshall

The Pac-12 can make a case as the most successful conference in collegiate athletics, amassing more than 500 NCAA championsh­ips while leading the nation in titles 56 of the past 62 years.

But when it comes to the biggest moneymaker­s, football and men’s basketball, the “Conference of Champions” has come up short for years.

The lack of success, particular­ly in football, combined with the conference’s media rights missteps have put the Pac-12 on shaky financial footing, opening the door for two of its marquee schools to jump ship.

Now, with the loss of UCLA and USC to the Big Ten in 2024, the conference and its remaining member schools face an even more uncertain economic future.

“You have exploding costs on one end and your revenue sources are being decimated, which is a tremendous pressure,” Smith College economics professor Andrew Zimbalist said. “On the other hand, what do you do? Well, something pretty radical I think is going to have to happen.”

The Pac-12’s dilemma has been building for years.

Once a powerhouse football conference, the Pac-12 has been a bit player in the national championsh­ip conversati­on of late.

Since Oregon was blown out by Ohio State in the 2015 championsh­ip game, the Pac-12 has had one team play in the College Football Playoff: Washington in 2017. Oregon has fallen off since Chip Kelly left for the NFL in 2013 and Southern California, once the conference’s marquee program, never fully got back on track after the NCAA sanctions of the Pete Carroll era.

The Pac-12 has been just as quiet in men’s basketball, getting two teams — Oregon in 2017 and UCLA in 2021 — through to the Final Four.

The lack of success made the Pac-12’s football games maybe-watch TV, which in turn has made it more difficult to lure top coaches and recruits away from rival conference­s — particular­ly the football juggernaut SEC.

“In the old days, USC and UCLA would be right up there at the top of the national football heap every year, and they’ve fallen way down,” Zimbalist said. “And so you need some fill up, some boost to get them to a point where they can really be a strong, strong franchise again — and I just don’t see that.”

The Pac-12 drop-off was compounded by its media rights deals.

As TV packages began to bulge, former Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott pushed for the conference to build its own network instead of partnering with ESPN, Fox or another network. A self-sustained network would allow the Pac-12 to control programmin­g, showcase its highly successful Olympic sports and reap all the financial rewards.

The Pac-12 Networks never soared like Scott envisioned, bogged down, in part, by an inability to reach an agreement with Di

rectv, which prevented the conference’s sports from reaching millions of homes.

The Pac-12 did work out a lucrative deal to have some of its games shown on ESPN and Fox, but the networks often wanted those to fill late-night time slots on the East Coast.

The deals left the conference in a “Pac-12 After Dark” hole. The Pac-12 had the lowest distributi­on number among Power Five schools, paying its member institutio­ns $19.8 million in 2021.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? UCLA guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., right, tries to get by Southern California forward Isaiah Mobley during a game in March in Los Angeles.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO UCLA guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., right, tries to get by Southern California forward Isaiah Mobley during a game in March in Los Angeles.

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