Important to note that the PAC 12 is using revenue to pay for network expenses, so it looks like they are falling behind here, but they are really investing and a good number of years ahead of the ACC most likely.
Teel and article missing HUGE point....whether the ACC ever gets an ACC network, which is a BIG 'if,' if it isn't very profitable, ie to an SEC/B1G level, then it doesn't matter if it exists or not. The whole point is revenue and this fact is often overlooked.
What Teel and the article do correctly point out is that the ACC better make it happen or it will get left behind, and FAST (ie over the next 5 years).
Due to record revenue distribution, the ACC is in strong financial position… for now.
"Now that’s it 2014, another myth from the 2012 realignment message board era has been blown away. The ACC would be shredded to pieces, didn’t happen. The ACC would be left out of a playoff systems. That wasn’t close to happening. The ACC couldn’t win a national title in football. Florida State pulled that feat off this past year. The ACC would be financially dwarfed by the other 4 power conference. Today that myth was put to rest.
The ACC for the 2013-2014 will distribute $20.8 million per team. This is a whopping $100K less than the mighty SEC. From ESPN’s article on this topic.
The $20.8 million average each school is in line to receive is nearly identical to what will go to the 14-team SEC, which announced last week it will hand out slightly more than $20.9 million to its member schools after a record $292.8 million in total revenue.
This is good news for ACC schools. They are not being left behind in terms of conference revenue distributions. Don’t let some of the mis-information confuse you. A big deal was made about the Pac 12 taking over as the highest revenue producing conference. That’s great, but starting a network a network isn’t free. The Pac 12 actually distributed slightly less than $20 Million per school.
the Big 12 continued to show its stability under commissioner Bob Bowlsby by reporting a record $220.1 million in distribution revenue Friday at the conclusion of the conference’s spring meetings.
and
This month, the Big Ten reported almost $26 million in distribution to its schools; the Pac-12 handed out just under $20 million in distribution to its members.
Well there you have it. The Big 10 distributed nearly $26 Million. The Big 12 distributed $22 Million. The SEC was at $20.9 Million. The ACC came in at $20.8 Million, and Pac 12 brings up the rear at $19.8 Million.
The important things to remember is you don’t have to be first on this list. In fact, in today’s world of $150 Million revenue producing schools some conference distributions can account for as little as 15% of a school’s revenue source. Some schools are simply going to make more because of ticket sales, boosters, etc. Nothing will change that, so when it comes to conference distributions you just want to be in the ball park of everyone else, and the ACC is certainly in the ball park. That said now is not the time for the ACC to just pat itself on the back.
On twitter I chatted a bit with the dean of ACC journalists David Teel about how it more than appeared the ACC was right in line financially with the other power conferences.
Jeffrey Fann @TalkinACCSports
Jeffrey Fann @TalkinACCSports
@DavidTeelatDP @hokiesmash so by any metric the acc is in the ballpark of the other pwr 5 as opposed to the crazy numbers of 2 yrs ago.
David Teel @DavidTeelatDP Follow
@TalkinACCSports Best I can tell. But ACC channel a must to keep up w/Joneses.
Jeffrey Fann @TalkinACCSports
@hokiesmash @DavidTeelatDP got to get it up within 3 yrs.
David Teel @DavidTeelatDP Follow
@TalkinACCSports @hokiesmash Believe they will.
ESPN's plan as I can gather from collection of sources so far reliable
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