San Francisco Chronicle

League booming in attendance, ratings

- By Pat Graham

BOULDER, Colo. — For a conference with teams about to scatter in all directions, the Pac-12 sure looks rosy at the moment.

Overall attendance is up around the league through the halfway mark (thanks, Deion Sanders). Ratings, too, are booming (tip of the cap to Sanders again). The league also has six teams in the Top 25, including No. 5 Washington in a great position to earn a place in the College Football Playoff. The Pac-12 even has a chance at a second straight Heisman Trophy winner (Washington quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. is among the favorites ).

Of course, there’s Sanders again, the Colorado coach who wins these days even when his team doesn’t. Less than a day after the Buffaloes’ colossal collapse against Stanford, “Saturday Night Live ” did a parody of Sanders with the actor in the skit decked out in Colorado gear and sunglasses. Now that’s prime marketing for the school.

The conference remains on quite a roll even as it’s about to wave goodbye to most of its schools.

The Pac-12, with roots going back more than a century, will see 10 teams soon exit. Only Washington State and Oregon State remain. Southern California, UCLA, Oregon and Washington are headed to the Big Ten. Stanford and Cal will venture to the ACC, while Sanders and the Buffaloes, along with Arizona, Arizona State, and Utah, join the Big 12.

One last hurrah. Sanders has played an integral role in raising the conference’s attendance figures. The league is averaging 47,157 fans so far. It’s the highest mark since 2017, when the Pac-12 averaged 49,621 over 78 home games.

What’s more, eight of the 12 schools have increased their average home attendance from a year ago, according to research provided by the Pac-12. Leading the way is Colorado at plus-10,545, followed by Oregon State (plus-8,173) and Arizona State (plus-5,982). UCLA just announced Tuesday the game against Colorado at the Rose Bowl on Oct. 28 is a sellout.

It’s a conference filled with ranked teams, too, including No. 9 Oregon, No. 12 Oregon State, No. 14 Utah, No. 18 USC and No. 25 UCLA. The league has seven straight weeks with at least six teams in the AP Top 25.

Television ratings are through the roof, too. There have been 11 college games this season that have topped the 7 million mark in viewership (across Nielsen-rated television), according to Sports Media Watch. Of the 11, five involved Colorado, including a 10.03 million viewership when the Buffaloes played Oregon on Sept. 23. Washington’s 36-33 win over Oregon last Saturday also eclipsed 7 million.

“It would have been very interestin­g to see what the options would have been if the Pac-12 was going to market now instead of a year ago,” said Jon Lewis, who started Sports Media Watch around 17 years ago to track sports TV ratings and rights deals.

The media rights plan was a sticking point after UCLA and USC announced their intention to leave. Colorado followed, bolting before Pac-12 commission­er George Kliavkoff presented a proposed deal with Apple. And while it guaranteed yearly payouts of $23 million to $25 million to each Pac-12 member school, there were also escalators based on subscripti­ons to the Pac-12 package. For many members, the deal was too risky and left them in danger of falling too far behind schools in other Power Five conference­s.

“Based on what we saw this weekend with Washington and Oregon, what we’ve seen all season with Colorado, it’s obvious to me the Pac-12, at least as far as football, which is the biggest thing, could have easily withstood the departure of USC and UCLA,” Lewis said. “Maybe not in terms of whatever other various aspects that are factored into all of these discussion­s, but at least in terms of TV ratings.”

 ?? Christian Petersen/Getty Images ?? Deion Sanders, center, has the bright lights of the spotlight on Colorado and the Pac-12 this year.
Christian Petersen/Getty Images Deion Sanders, center, has the bright lights of the spotlight on Colorado and the Pac-12 this year.

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