And what may prove to be the Big Ten’s most brilliant move is agreeing to TV deals with such surprisingly short six-year terms. Just a few years ago the SEC lagged behind in our conference rankings thanks largely to being stuck with longterm TV deals that were lucrative when signed but had become vastly undervalued as the market surged over the last decade. The Big Ten’s new deals allow the conference the freedom to re-up for greater riches in the short-term (assuming that the oft-rumored sports TV bubble doesn’t pop). In fact, the Big Ten’s new deals expire before those of any of the other major conferences.
As noted above, the Big 12 comes close to matching the Big Ten on a per-school basis. We estimate the conference generated $302 million from football, basketball and TV. That’s fifth-most among all conferences, but split just ten ways is good for $30.2 million per school. That’s thanks largely to the $113 million the conference got from football postseason play, $65 million of which came from the College Football Playoff. The remainder of that football total came from non-CFP bowl contracts, including an incredibly lucrative Sugar Bowl association. Much like how last year the Orange Bowl, as a non-playoff game, kicked off $27.5 million for the ACC and SEC, this year the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl were contract bowls and thus paid out a staggering $140 million or so to the Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC.
The Orange Bowl’s turn as a playoff game cost the ACC that $27.5 million payout this year, and thus the ACC lags behind the Pac-12 field in total income with just $328 million this year from bowls, tourney and TV. Across the conference’s 15-school membership that’s just $21.9 million per school. Of course it’s an inexact comparison, since that school count includes football-independent Notre Dame, but even divided 14 ways it comes to $23.4 million per school, still good for just fifth-best. This year the ACC was actually the College Football Playoff’s biggest winner. The ACC led all conferences with $71 million from the CFP, a total that doesn’t include the $8.7 million that Notre Dame netted for making the Fiesta Bowl. In total the organization paid out $425 million this year, $326 million of which went to the Power Five conferences."