Saturday, May 20, 2017

ACC to SEC revenue gap now at $19 million

Let's hope the Swofford promises come true and the ESPN ACCN saves the ACC.  Revenue gaps can't stay this large for long without making a big impact.

https://www.seccountry.com/sec/sec-per-school-revenue-outpaces-other-conferences

http://csnbbs.com/thread-818278.html

Per school numbers:

SEC: 45.6 million
PAC: 40.7 million
B1G: 34.5 million
B12: 31.3 million
ACC: 24.9 million


http://www.dailypress.com/sports/teel-blog/

The ACC on Friday released its 2015-16 federal tax return, Form 990, which reported $373.4 million in total revenue, down 7.4 percent from the previous year's $403.1 million.
 
The decrease was caused by two factors: Maryland's one-time, $31.4 penalty for leaving the ACC for the Big Ten inflated 2014-15 revenue. Plus, in 2015-16 the Orange Bowl, the ACC's contract bowl, hosted a College Football Playoff semifinal, and in such seasons, the conference receives less money.
While ACC revenue for media rights ($217.9 million to $226.1 million) and NCAA basketball ($18.4 million to $20.6 million) increased, the conference's average distribution to its 14 full-member schools fell 10.1 percent, to $23.8 million from $26.2 million. Partial member Notre Dame received $4.3 million, and the league distributed 90.4 percent of its revenue back to its campuses.
 

Pac-12: $488 million revenue, 70.5 percent distributed, average $28.7 million per school.
Big 12: $313.2 million revenue, 90.9 percent distributed, average $28.49 million per school.
Commissioner John Swofford believes the 2019 launch of the linear ACC Network will close the disparity.
“That’s why we’re doing the channel,” he told the Raleigh News & Observer's Andrew Carter at the league's spring meetings in Florida on Thursday. “We fully expect a gap with particularly the Big Ten and the SEC here for a couple of years. But that’s the very reason we signed to do what we’re doing.
“And we fully expect that that gap will narrow considerably when we get the channel up and running.”
In fiscal 2016-17 and beyond, the ACC will also see the financial benefits of its unrivaled NCAA men's basketball tournament success of the last three years. Those "units" are paid on a rolling, six-year basis.
Swofford earned $2.9 million in calendar 2015, the tax return shows, well below the Pacific 12's Larry Scott ($4.2 million) and Big Ten's Jim Delany ($2.4 million, but as USA Today calculated, also a $20 million bonus).
The ACC's five highest-paid associate commissioners -- Paul Brazeau, Brad Hostetter, Jeff Elliott, Michael Strickland and Amy Yakola -- earned between $312,011 and $262,158, below most of their Power Five peers.
Due in large measure to keeping management of the Pac-12 Networks in-house, seven executives other than Scott earned more than $500,000. Pay in the other Power Five conferences was more measured, with top-earning associate commissioners receiving $274,275 (Big 12), $390,808 (SEC) and $621,133 (Big Ten).
 

Here are some charts.
ACC REVENUES LAST NINE YEARS (IN MILLIONS)
                                Total      TV           Bowl      NCAA    Avg. share
2007-2008            $162.8   $75.3     $29.2     $15.1     $11.8
2008-2009            $172.7   $76.9     $30.7     $15.9     $13.6
2009-2010            $158.2   $77.6     $31.6     $18.2     $11.7
2010-2011            $167.2   $79.3     $36.7     $18.2     $12.3
2011-2012            $223.6   $130.5   $43.8     $17.7     $16.9
2012-2013            $232.4   $146.6   $36.7     $18.2     $17.6
2013-2014            $302.3   $197.2   $48.8     $17.5    $19.3*
2014-2015            $403.1  $217.9    $94.2    $18.4     $26.2*
2015-2016            $337.4  $226.1    $85.8    $20.6     $23.8*
* Average full share. Partial ACC member Notre Dame received $4.9 million in its first year in the league, $6.2 million in its second, $4.3 million in its third.

VIRGINIA TECH, VIRGINIA SHARES OF ACC REVENUE   
                                Tech      UVa
2007-2008            $12.8M     $12.1M
2008-2009            $15.4M     $12.5M
2009-2010            $11.9M     $11.0M
2010-2011            $14.1M     $11.2M
2011-2012            $18.5M     $17.4M
2012-2013            $18.3M     $16.8M
2013-2014           $19.3M     $18.3M
2014-2015           $26.7M     $25.8M
2015-16               $23.8M     $22.9M
ACC SHARES FOR 2015-16
Florida State: $24.8M
Georgia Tech: $22.6M
North Carolina: $24.2M
Duke: $24.0M
N.C. State: $23.9M
Boston College: $22.8M
Virginia Tech: $23.8M
Clemson: $27.9M
Miami: $23.7M
Virginia: $22.9M
Wake Forest: $22.6M
Pittsburgh: $23.6M
Louisville: $23.7M
Syracuse: $22.8M
Notre Dame: $4.3M

Generic Writer GuyVerified account @DavidHaleESPN 20 hours ago
So on a per school basis, that'd be:
SEC- $45.6M
P12- $40.6
B1G- $34.5
B12- $31.3
ACC- $26.6

Bryan FischerVerified account @BryanDFischer 21 hours ago

David TeelVerified account @DavidTeelatDP 22 hours ago

David TeelVerified account @DavidTeelatDP 22 hours ago
 
David TeelVerified account @DavidTeelatDP 21 hours ago

1 comment:

  1. The secn and btn combined make $19 million. The acc is going to remain way behind even if the accn is successful, which is a huge unknown.

    Swofford blows

    ReplyDelete