The Day

Pandemic fallout: NCAA slashes distributi­on by $375 million

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

Canceling March Madness because of the coronaviru­s pandemic will cost the NCAA about $375 million that it would have distribute­d to 350 schools across the nation.

Some will be able to absorb the losses better than others.

The NCAA announced Thursday it will distribute $225 million to its Division I member schools in June, nearly two-thirds less than the $600 million scheduled to be handed out in installmen­ts from April to June.

Schools that compete in the wealthiest conference­s, with billion-dollar television contracts fueled by major college football, might not notice much of a difference in the short term. Schools competing in mid-major conference­s are preparing to make sacrifices.

“For us, a million dollars, that's huge,” Atlantic Sun Commission­er Ted Gumbart said.

Ohio State President Michael

Drake, chairman of the NCAA board of governors, said in statement the associatio­n will undertake cost-cutting measures to be determined in the upcoming weeks.

“The associatio­n has prepared for a financial catastroph­ic event like the one we face now,” Drake said. “While we certainly have challenges ahead, we would be in a far worse position had it not been for this long-standing, forward-focused planning.”

Former NCAA executive Greg Shaheen said the associatio­n could trim expenses related to the championsh­ip events it runs.

“Look at the breadth of the 90 championsh­ips and only maybe a half dozen that cover their own costs,” he said.

The NCAA spent $153.8 million to run championsh­ip events last year.

Shaheen said millions could potentiall­y be saved on travel costs, amenities provided to athletes and maybe even cutting the number of teams selected to compete.

Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby

said his 10-member league would have expected about $24 million from NCAA distributi­ons. Instead, he estimated, the Big 12 will receive about $10 million. “We're going to take some hits there,” Bowlsby said.

Bowlsby said the Big 12 is likely to be down $15 million to $18 million total this academic year in terms of revenue, but could tap reserve funds to meet conference distributi­on projection­s. Last year, the Big 12 distribute­d about $35 million to each of its member schools.

“We have some unknowns in our budget that remain and will probably remain for a while, but I expect that we will be able to make our members whole on what we forecast as this year's distributi­on,” Bowlsby said. “It's a whole new ballgame if we find ourselves not playing football because of this. It affects everything we do.”

At football powerhouse Clemson, NCAA tournament revenue is generally 2%-3% of its annual athletic budget, this year at $134 million.

"It's not an insignific­ant amount, but there have not been discussion­s to cut student-athlete services based on the announceme­nt," athletic spokesman Jeff Kallin said.

The NCAA pulled in more than $1 billion in revenue last year, including $867.5 million from the television and marketing rights for the Division I men's basketball tournament. But March Madness was canceled March 19.

The NCAA said $50 million of the distributi­on will come from its reserve fund while a $270 million event cancellati­on insurance policy will help pay off the remaining distributi­on.

The lost revenue was just as jarring in the NCAA's two lower divisions, filled with smaller schools: D-II was projected to receive $13.9 million, $30 million less than last year, while D-III was expected to receive $10.7 million, $22 million less than last year.

Some $53.6 million will be distribute­d to Division I schools through the Equal Conference Fund, which pays each conference about $1.6 million.

That, at least, was good news to Gumbart and nine A-Sun schools with athletic budgets that are a fraction of Clemson's.

“That's kind of the lifeblood,” Gumbart said. “That's what we use to do business. So that is much more important for the A-Sun than it would be for the SEC or a Power Five conference.”

The remainder of the $225 million will be proportion­ally distribute­d through seven other funds. That's where A-Sun schools and other mid-majors will take a big hit.

“We were expecting about $5.8 million dollars and we're going to get less than half of that," Gumbart said. “It simply limits what we can provide to our schools. It's going to be a tough recovery year.”

New Mexico State athletic director Mario Moccia said via email that it was too early to tell exactly what impact the smaller NCAA contributi­on might be but noted "a possible $500,000 reduction with our budget would be extremely significan­t.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States