By Jon Wilner
Bay Area News Group
Eleven months ago, the Pac-12 stood down. Believing itself stable and aligned, it passed on the opportunity to raid the teetering Big 12 following the announced departures of Texas and Oklahoma.
Now, 319 days later and reeling from the loss of USC and UCLA, the conference is vulnerable to a rebuilt, aggressive, potentially merciless Big 12.
But step back, assess the landscape from 50,000 feet, and it’s clear the conferences are far more alike than different:
— Both are preparing to enter the next phase of college football without their top brands.
— Both are far behind the enhanced versions of the SEC and Big Ten competitively and financially.
— Both have expiring media rights contracts (the Pac-12 in 2024, the Big 12 in 2025) that allow for changes to membership, structure and business models.
— Both are, like the ACC, scrambling for ways to secure spots in the expanded College Football Playoff (starting in 2026).
“The best thing (for the Pac-12) would be to figure out something with the Big 12 and negotiate with ESPN and create a channel,” said Patrick Crakes, who operates Crakes Media consulting and is a former Fox Sports senior vice president for programming, research and content strategy.
Three years ago, the Hotline examined the benefits of a strategic alliance between the Pac-12 and Big 12 that would make both stronger.
Bob Bowlsby, the Big 12 commissioner at the time, suggested a partnership was “not far-fetched,” but nothing materialized.
Then came COVID and the departures of Texas, Oklahoma, USC and UCLA.
Now, an alliance — or an outright merger — might be their best chance for relevance at the highest level in the sport’s next era.
The conferences are stronger together, not with one raiding the other but with each embracing a partnership that would add media value, warrant slots in the expanded CFP, marginalize the ACC, span every time zone and create a credible counterweight to the SEC and Big Ten.
“Both leagues would make more by working together than they would separately,” Crakes said.
“You can say, ‘We aren’t the Big Ten or SEC, but we have seven or eight high-quality teams, and we’re entitled to a couple spots in the CFP.’ Maybe you’re 75 percent of those two, but you could get two or three slots in the playoff.”
Crakes is not directly involved in the discussions involving the conferences and their media partners, but he knows many of the key players, including new Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark.
His broad perspective is shaped by the confluence of four events that will catapult college football into its next chapter:
2024: The Pac-12 begins a new media contract cycle
2025: The Big 12 begins a new media contract cycle
2025: Notre Dame’s last year under the current NBC contract
2026: The first season on an expanded CFP
Bay Area News Group
Eleven months ago, the Pac-12 stood down. Believing itself stable and aligned, it passed on the opportunity to raid the teetering Big 12 following the announced departures of Texas and Oklahoma.
Now, 319 days later and reeling from the loss of USC and UCLA, the conference is vulnerable to a rebuilt, aggressive, potentially merciless Big 12.
But step back, assess the landscape from 50,000 feet, and it’s clear the conferences are far more alike than different:
— Both are preparing to enter the next phase of college football without their top brands.
— Both are far behind the enhanced versions of the SEC and Big Ten competitively and financially.
— Both have expiring media rights contracts (the Pac-12 in 2024, the Big 12 in 2025) that allow for changes to membership, structure and business models.
— Both are, like the ACC, scrambling for ways to secure spots in the expanded College Football Playoff (starting in 2026).
“The best thing (for the Pac-12) would be to figure out something with the Big 12 and negotiate with ESPN and create a channel,” said Patrick Crakes, who operates Crakes Media consulting and is a former Fox Sports senior vice president for programming, research and content strategy.
Three years ago, the Hotline examined the benefits of a strategic alliance between the Pac-12 and Big 12 that would make both stronger.
Bob Bowlsby, the Big 12 commissioner at the time, suggested a partnership was “not far-fetched,” but nothing materialized.
Then came COVID and the departures of Texas, Oklahoma, USC and UCLA.
Now, an alliance — or an outright merger — might be their best chance for relevance at the highest level in the sport’s next era.
The conferences are stronger together, not with one raiding the other but with each embracing a partnership that would add media value, warrant slots in the expanded CFP, marginalize the ACC, span every time zone and create a credible counterweight to the SEC and Big Ten.
“Both leagues would make more by working together than they would separately,” Crakes said.
“You can say, ‘We aren’t the Big Ten or SEC, but we have seven or eight high-quality teams, and we’re entitled to a couple spots in the CFP.’ Maybe you’re 75 percent of those two, but you could get two or three slots in the playoff.”
Crakes is not directly involved in the discussions involving the conferences and their media partners, but he knows many of the key players, including new Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark.
His broad perspective is shaped by the confluence of four events that will catapult college football into its next chapter:
2024: The Pac-12 begins a new media contract cycle
2025: The Big 12 begins a new media contract cycle
2025: Notre Dame’s last year under the current NBC contract
2026: The first season on an expanded CFP
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