The ACC television deal is divided 80% for football and 20% for basketball.
The ACC led all conferences with 19 game units in 2017, matching their leading total from 2016. The SEC was second with 16, followed by the Big 10 and Big East with 15. The Big 12 was next with 14, then the Pac-12 with 11.
The West Coast Conference recorded six game units. The A-10 Conference got four game units. The American and the WAC each got three. Conference USA and the Missouri Valley Conference both recorded two game units each. All other qualifying conferences received a single game unit.
Because of its 19 game units, the ACC will reap $32.49 million over the next six years.
The SEC will haul in $27.36 million. Both the Big 10 and Big East will have $25.65 million to disperse.
The Big 12 should expect to get $23.94 million and the Pac-12 $18.81 million.
The NCAA doesn’t regulate how conferences dispense these funds between their member schools. Most conferences disperse the funds evenly between all their members, even those schools which didn’t qualify for the NCAA tournament.
HallHoops wrote:Big East numbers are available as follows for the year ended June 30, 2015:
Revenues:
FOX Rights Fees $31,572,757
NCAA Credits 4,185,882
Conference Championships 4,399,610
Corporate Sponsorships 2,036,632
Other 440,463
Total Revenues $42,635,344
On April 1, 2016 sju88grad wrote:
Interesting Wall Street Journal article on the value of college basketball teams...
http://www.wsj.com/articles/how-much-is ... 1459459516
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Louisville remains college basketball’s most valuable team according to an annual study by Ryan Brewer, an assistant professor of finance at Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus.
Brewer studied 175 of Division I’s 351 teams, accounting for those in major conferences and others that have made the tournament in recent years. Brewer analyzed each program’s revenues and expenses and made cash-flow adjustments, risk assessments and growth projections to calculate what a college team would be worth on the open market, if it could be bought and sold like a professional franchise.
11 - Connecticut ($137,900,000)
24 - Dayton ($80,600,000)
26 – Xavier ($78,100,000)
35 – Marquette ($59,600,000)
37 – St. John’s ($55,000,000)
51 – DePaul ($42,900,000)
52 – Georgetown($42,200,000)
54 – Villanova ($40,400,000)
73 – Providence ($29,700,000)
78 – Creighton ($28,100,000)
79 – Seton Hall ($27,700,000)
93 – Butler ($20,200,000)
96 - Saint Louis ($18,600,000)
In an annual study, Ryan Brewer, an assistant professor of finance at Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus, assesses what every college team would be worth on the open market if it could be bought and sold like a professional franchise. The study analyzes each program’s revenues and expenses with cash-flow adjustments, risk assessments, and growth projections.
Rank - Team • 2016 Valuation • 2015 Valuation • % Change
21 - Dayton • $88,415,000 • $80,594,000 • +9.70%
28 - Marquette • $71,918,000 • $59,623,000 • +20.60%
29 - Xavier • $70,562,000 • $78,084,000 • -9.60%
38 - Connecticut • $57,962,000 • $137,895,000 • -58.00%
47 - Villanova • $50,534,000 • $40,445,000 • +24.90%
52 - Georgetown • $47,910,000 • $42,157,000 • +13.60%
55 - St. John's • $45,213,000 • $55,036,000 • -17.80%
73 - Providence • $31,734,000 • $29,656,000 • +7.00%
74 - Creighton • $31,619,000 • $28,084,000 • +12.60%
81 - Saint Louis • $28,094,000 • $18,570,000 • +51.30%
82 - DePaul • $27,210,000 • $42,911,000 • -36.60%
85 - Seton Hall • $25,715,000 • $27,689,000 • -7.10%
92 - Butler • $22,588,000 • $20,240,000 • +11.60%
Bill Marsh wrote:Why are Fox revenues listed as $31.5 million? Is that a typo?
The contract is $500 million for 12 years, which equals $41,666,667 annually - unless it starts low and has an escalator to increase the pay out annually.
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