Updated ACC Monies discussion by Teel | Syracusefan.com

Updated ACC Monies discussion by Teel

CuseLegacy

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The
ACC’s most recent four federal tax returns in hand, I totaled the revenue the conference has distributed to each of its 12 schools. Not surprisingly, given their respective football programs, Virginia Tech received the most, Duke
the least.
But courtesy of the league’s long-standing policy of dividing most revenue equally, the gap from the Hokies ($54,092,780) to the Blue Devils ($45,922,625) was not jarring, about $2 million per year.
Virginia
was 10th on the money trough at $47,912,523.
What’s most interesting is contrasting the ACC numbers to other conferences. Since each distributes revenue differently, such comparisons are not strictly apples-to-apples, but they do provide some context.
For example, courtesy of
Jon Wilmer’s blog at the San Jose Mercury-News, the Pacific 10’s per-school revenue outlays for the last four years are available. The numbers range from $43,308,405 for Southern California to $27,594,469 for Washington State
.
So the ACC’s low was $2.6 million, or about $625,000 per year, above the Pac-10’s high. And the ACC’s high was nearly double the Pac-10’s low.
Now with the addition of
Colorado and Utah, a new commissioner in Larry Scott, and lucrative TV deals with ESPN
and Fox, the Pac-12’s finances are poised to change dramatically. The contracts are worth a reported $3 billion over 12 years, or on average, $21 million annually per school.
The ACC’s 15-year arrangement with ESPN is worth $3.6 billion, which figures to about $17.1 million annually per school. The contract was renegotiated this spring to reflect the impending arrival of
Syracuse and Pittsburgh from the Big East
, but ESPN had exclusive rights in the amended package, limiting the ACC’s leverage.
Regardless, based on the Big East’s recent tax returns, Syracuse and Pittsburgh soon will enjoy what for them will be unprecedented windfalls.
In the last four fiscal years, through 2010-11, the Orange received $30,276,525 from the Big East. The Panthers received $34,486,845. The ACC average for that span was $49,391,094.
Moreover, the ACC’s media revenue is set to increase by 30 percent, and the conference far better positioned than the Big East for college football’s impending four-team playoff and six-bowl hierarchy. The ACC champion will have guaranteed access to those six games; the Big East will not.
Not to suggest that the ACC was or will be the richest kid on the block. From fiscal 2007-08 through 2010-11, the
Southeastern Conference
distributed, on average, $57,420,000 per school. Plus, the SEC estimates 2011-12 per-school payouts of approximately $20.13 million.
Nor to suggest the ACC is a college sports pauper, financially or otherwise. As the numbers and
future football postseason structure
show, quite the contrary.
Below are the ACC’s school-by-school totals for the last four years.
VIRGINIA TECH:
$54,092,780
GEORGIA TECH:
$50,901,639
BOSTON COLLEGE:
$50,659,721
FLORIDA STATE:
$50,597,918
CLEMSON:
$49,819,479
NORTH CAROLINA:
$49,513,447
MARYLAND
: 49,423,868
MIAMI
: 48,726,570
From Fiscal 2008=2009 to 2012-2011 the ACC distributed an average of 37,519,663 to each of its’ schools. The Big 12 an average of 31,061,365 a difference of 6,458,298 per school or 2,152,766 per year.
 
In other words....thank god we're in the ACC

(edit....it still feels so weird to say that)
 
ACC-logo.jpg
greater-than.png
SunBeastConf.jpg
 

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