The Arizona Republic

NCAA makes big cut in school payouts

- Steve Berkowitz AP Contributi­ng: Wolken Paul Myerberg, Dan

The NCAA will reduce its direct distributi­on to Division I conference­s and schools for 2020 by about $375 million to $225 million, the associatio­n announced Thursday.

The move, voted on by the NCAA’s top governing board of college presidents, resulted from cancellati­on of the Division I men’s basketball tournament due to the coronaviru­s epidemic. That event generates nearly all of the associatio­n’s roughly $1.1 billion in normal annual revenue.

According to its 2020 Division I Revenue Distributi­on Plan document, the NCAA had been scheduled to distribute just under $600 million directly to conference­s and schools from April 15 through June 10.

NCAA chief financial officer Kathleen McNeely said in an interview with USA TODAY that all of this year’s distributi­on will be made in June, probably early in the month.

The reduction’s impact on schools might vary by conference. Some of the NCAA money goes directly to schools. But most goes to conference­s, which, in turn, have revenue-sharing arrangemen­ts.

Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby said during a conference call after the NCAA’s announceme­nt that the conference maintains an operating reserve “and we have some money beyond that that was a result of money that we withheld last year for another purpose.” So its schools might feel no impact unless the football season is affected by the pandemic.

“It’s a whole new ballgame if we find ourselves not playing football,” Bowlsby said.

Division I public school athletic department­s generally received 2% to 5% of their total operating revenue in fiscal 2019 from the NCAA, including reimbursem­ents and payments for hosting championsh­ips, schools’ annual financial reports to the associatio­n showed.

USA TODAY compiled the schools’ financial reports in partnershi­p with Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communicat­ions.

The NCAA makes its annual revenue payouts from nine separated pools.

Each is allotted a different amount and each has a different methodolog­y for determinin­g how much goes to each conference or school.

The best known of these pools is based on how well teams do in the men’s basketball tournament.

That pool, like others, wealthiest conference­s.

The NCAA is attempting to mitigate the impact of this year’s reduced distributi­on on lower-revenue conference­s by leaving unchanged the amount of money in a pool divided equally among the 32 basketball-playing conference­s,

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the then reducing the amount in each of the other pools by a little more than 70%.

The associatio­n said that of the $225 million total distributi­on, $50 million will come from NCAA reserves.

The associatio­n also has a $270 million event cancellati­on insurance policy connected to the tournament, and the proceeds, when received, will be used to pay off a line of credit that the associatio­n will tap as needed.

NCAA chief executive officer Donald Remy said the associatio­n also is “triaging an examinatio­n of all of our (associatio­n-wide) programs to see where we can cut costs,” and McNeely said efforts are being made to cut the national office budget.

Although event cancellati­on insurance claims can bog down in a variety of disputes, McNeely said the associatio­n has been in touch with its primary underwrite­r “and we feel pretty good about where the claim is at this point. We believe our fact pattern for a claim is very strong.”

How the NCAA plans to work out matters with its primary multimedia and marketing rights partners, CBS and Turner, remains to be seen.

Moody’s Investors Service issued a report on the NCAA’s credit rating on Tuesday that was based in part of the associatio­n receiving 30% of the $827 million it was scheduled to get in 201920 from CBS/Turner, Moody’s vice president and senior credit officer Dennis Gephardt told USA TODAY.

Remy said he could not comment on the terms of the CBS/Turner agreement because they are confidenti­al but “we are continuing to have conversati­ons with all of our media partners about the circumstan­ces and what the future is going to look like.”

The NCAA’s contract with CBS/Turner currently is scheduled to run through 2032 and has more than $12 billion remaining on it.

In 2004, the associatio­n began setting aside money as hedge against a possible catastroph­ic event that would affect the end-of-season basketball tournament, and by 2014 that fund grew to nearly $400 million.

However, at the direction of its governing board of college presidents, the NCAA distribute­d $200 million of that money to schools to help them with increasing costs and spent it on their behalf in other ways, including a $208.7 million legal settlement.

Remy said the current remediatio­n plan – insurance, plus a willingnes­s to use reserves and reduce revenue distributi­on – was put in place in concert with the board’s decision to spend the original emergency fund.

As for that spending, he said, “We’ve seen a lot of good done on campuses as result of the” $200 million distributi­on to schools.

 ??  ?? The NCAA will distribute $225 million to its Division I members in June, $375 million less than had been budgeted this year because the coronaviru­s outbreak forced the cancellati­on of the men's basketball tournament.
The NCAA will distribute $225 million to its Division I members in June, $375 million less than had been budgeted this year because the coronaviru­s outbreak forced the cancellati­on of the men's basketball tournament.

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