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PAC Media ( 1 year deal )

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The new Pac-12 media deal, effective for the 2025 football season, is projected to pay each school approximately $10 million per year. This is significantly less than the previous Pac-12 deal, which averaged $30 million per school. The new deal involves CBS, ESPN, and The CW. The payout is still higher than what the Mountain West Conference (MW) currently receives, with MW schools making around $3.5 million annually.
 
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The new Pac-12 media deal, effective for the 2025 football season, is projected to pay each school approximately $10 million per year. This is significantly less than the previous Pac-12 deal, which averaged $30 million per school. The new deal involves CBS, ESPN, and The CW. The payout is still higher than what the Mountain West Conference (MW) currently receives, with MW schools making around $3.5 million annually.
Is it 10 million per school?
 
( AI Query answer)

The new Pac-12 media deal’s cost per program (school) isn’t explicitly detailed in the provided sources as a finalized figure for the upcoming long-term agreement. However, I can piece together estimates and context from available information to give you a clear picture.
For the 2025 season, the Pac-12, currently consisting of Oregon State and Washington State, secured a one-year media deal with The CW and Fox Sports to broadcast 13 home football games. A Reddit thread cites a rumor that this deal is worth around $25 million total, which, split between the two schools, would equate to roughly $12.5 million per school for the year. This aligns with posts on X estimating $10–15 million per school for 2025, though these figures are not officially confirmed.


Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond, the rebuilt Pac-12 will include six schools (Oregon State, Washington State, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, and San Diego State) and needs two more to meet NCAA FBS requirements. Estimates for a longer-term media deal vary:
  • Industry estimates: Analysts suggest a range of $8–12 million per school annually. For example, a post on X from September 2024 mentions a potential $8–10 million per school, while other sources indicate a target of $10–11 million, which would be a significant jump from the Mountain West’s current $4–5 million per school.

    Aspirational targets: The Pac-12 is reportedly aiming for a deal that could reach $12 million per school, especially if they add high-value schools like Memphis or Tulane. This would be a 71% improvement over the American Athletic Conference’s $7 million and triple the Mountain West’s average.


    Ceiling and challenges: Some analysts, like Patrick Crakes, argue that $10 million per school is likely the ceiling unless the media market shifts or the conference adds schools with significant media value. The previous Pac-12 deal (2012–2024) was worth $21 million per school annually, but the loss of major markets like Los Angeles (USC and UCLA) and the current media landscape make that unattainable.





    The Pac-12 is working with multiple partners (potentially ESPN, CBS, The CW, and streaming platforms like Amazon) for a multi-network deal, which could boost exposure but may not yield top-tier revenue due to the conference’s reduced brand power. For comparison, the ACC’s deal pays Cal and Stanford about $11 million annually (partial share), which serves as a benchmark for the Pac-12’s psychological target.



    Bottom line: For 2025, the Pac-12’s deal likely provides $10–12.5 million per school (Oregon State and Washington State). For 2026 onward, estimates for the six-team (or more) conference range from $8–12 million per school annually, with $10 million being a realistic midpoint based on current data. Exact figures will depend on final negotiations, additional schools, and the media partners involved. If you want me to dig deeper into potential partners or specific schools’ impact, let me know!
 
True. The $ 10 Mil is from X posts. Should see the number soon though. Although it's only for a 1 year deal with the two PAC schools.
Roughly the same as 2024? The PAC2 have lost coaches and players. They lost games to UNLV at home. Things are changing quick. SDSU is the same team. Things have changed too much plus they dont even have the 8th member yet. Texas State just said no. Will NMSU be next?
 
The new Pac-12 media deal, effective for the 2025 football season, is projected to pay each school approximately $10 million per year. This is significantly less than the previous Pac-12 deal, which averaged $30 million per school. The new deal involves CBS, ESPN, and The CW. The payout is still higher than what the Mountain West Conference (MW) currently receives, with MW schools making around $3.5 million annually.
If it is $10 million per team for the two PAC teams, then it would be likely that the new PAC deal would be less than that based on the current 7 teams, and the expectation that the other team will drag down the numbers. Would love for that to be the number!
 
Roughly the same as 2024? The PAC2 have lost coaches and players. They lost games to UNLV at home. Things are changing quick. SDSU is the same team. Things have changed too much plus they dont even have the 8th member yet. Texas State just said no. Will NMSU be next?
Rumors have them talking to Bishop Gorman now! :cool:
 
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From what I've seen, between ESPN, CBS, and the CW, they picked up the 13 home games that these 2 schools have. The number being talked about has said it's around $1M per game, which would be $13 M divided by two schools, or $6.5 M each.

If that's the case, it doesn't seem very likely to me that the overall Pac 12 media deal beyond 2026 will be as high as theyre hoping. Weren't OSU and WSU supposed to be the highest valued teams in terms of the media dollars?
 
Roughly the same as 2024? The PAC2 have lost coaches and players. They lost games to UNLV at home. Things are changing quick. SDSU is the same team. Things have changed too much plus they dont even have the 8th member yet. Texas State just said no. Will NMSU be next?

Texas State said no when?
 
They're getting a higher value because for this season the Pac 12 will own the rights to Apple Cup along with other premium games like Cal and Houston... They're also playing each other twice, which is hilariously stupid

Correct.

That is just for football. Basketball package possibly 3-4 million per school.

They'll hit between 8-10..

If they don't, this whole thing could be used as a 'how to video' on the best and most efficient way to burn millions of dollars if you don't have a lighter and gasoline handy.
 
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Correct.

That is just for football. Basketball package possibly 3-4 million per school.

They'll hit between 8-10..

If they don't, this whole thing could be used as a 'how to video' on the best and most efficient way to burn millions of dollars if you don't have a lighter and gasoline handy.
Again, what are you basing that figures upon? Is that a historical figures? Their conference title is PAC12 but they only have 2 teams. The nPAC have 5 MWC defectors. Wait until we get actual numbers.
 
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From what I've seen, between ESPN, CBS, and the CW, they picked up the 13 home games that these 2 schools have. The number being talked about has said it's around $1M per game, which would be $13 M divided by two schools, or $6.5 M each.

If that's the case, it doesn't seem very likely to me that the overall Pac 12 media deal beyond 2026 will be as high as theyre hoping. Weren't OSU and WSU supposed to be the highest valued teams in terms of the media dollars?
Exactly!
 
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From what I've seen, between ESPN, CBS, and the CW, they picked up the 13 home games that these 2 schools have. The number being talked about has said it's around $1M per game, which would be $13 M divided by two schools, or $6.5 M each.

If that's the case, it doesn't seem very likely to me that the overall Pac 12 media deal beyond 2026 will be as high as theyre hoping. Weren't OSU and WSU supposed to be the highest valued teams in terms of the media dollars?

OSU/BSU/WSU/SDSU

Next

CSU/FRESNO

USU pretty far down the food chain in terms of value.

Gonzaga is a bit if a paradox.

They likely create a situation where they significantly bump the value of the basketball value portion, but because they are getting a full share might actually hurt the overall AAV distributed to each school.

Im still not sure why Gonzaga was given a full share...
 
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That's why the online media mouthpieces of the Pac 12 have come out so strongly in past 2 weeks on how UNLV is in talks and how we can getcout of GOR, etc... they're out of options

Aside from a cryptic tweet about bowls of soup from the Texas State President there hasn't been anything that I've seen that Texas State declined an invite to the PAC 12.

Lots of speculation from the podcast element of media, but nothing from guys like Brett McMurphy or ESPN etc.

Not saying there haven't been talks just there's nothing that's been confirmed.

Boise AD tweeted out a gif of Dominoes falling. Again could be nothing could be something. Who knows.
 
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( AI Query answer)

The new Pac-12 media deal’s cost per program (school) isn’t explicitly detailed in the provided sources as a finalized figure for the upcoming long-term agreement. However, I can piece together estimates and context from available information to give you a clear picture.
For the 2025 season, the Pac-12, currently consisting of Oregon State and Washington State, secured a one-year media deal with The CW and Fox Sports to broadcast 13 home football games. A Reddit thread cites a rumor that this deal is worth around $25 million total, which, split between the two schools, would equate to roughly $12.5 million per school for the year. This aligns with posts on X estimating $10–15 million per school for 2025, though these figures are not officially confirmed.


Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond, the rebuilt Pac-12 will include six schools (Oregon State, Washington State, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, and San Diego State) and needs two more to meet NCAA FBS requirements. Estimates for a longer-term media deal vary:
  • Industry estimates: Analysts suggest a range of $8–12 million per school annually. For example, a post on X from September 2024 mentions a potential $8–10 million per school, while other sources indicate a target of $10–11 million, which would be a significant jump from the Mountain West’s current $4–5 million per school.

    Aspirational targets: The Pac-12 is reportedly aiming for a deal that could reach $12 million per school, especially if they add high-value schools like Memphis or Tulane. This would be a 71% improvement over the American Athletic Conference’s $7 million and triple the Mountain West’s average.


    Ceiling and challenges: Some analysts, like Patrick Crakes, argue that $10 million per school is likely the ceiling unless the media market shifts or the conference adds schools with significant media value. The previous Pac-12 deal (2012–2024) was worth $21 million per school annually, but the loss of major markets like Los Angeles (USC and UCLA) and the current media landscape make that unattainable.





    The Pac-12 is working with multiple partners (potentially ESPN, CBS, The CW, and streaming platforms like Amazon) for a multi-network deal, which could boost exposure but may not yield top-tier revenue due to the conference’s reduced brand power. For comparison, the ACC’s deal pays Cal and Stanford about $11 million annually (partial share), which serves as a benchmark for the Pac-12’s psychological target.



    Bottom line: For 2025, the Pac-12’s deal likely provides $10–12.5 million per school (Oregon State and Washington State). For 2026 onward, estimates for the six-team (or more) conference range from $8–12 million per school annually, with $10 million being a realistic midpoint based on current data. Exact figures will depend on final negotiations, additional schools, and the media partners involved. If you want me to dig deeper into potential partners or specific schools’ impact, let me know!
I was going to ask what your source(s) were for the $10M number. So, a random Reddit post and an X post. About as credible as Canzano (as in zero) IMHO. What I heard from equally unreliable sources was the $6.5M mentioned by another poster.

Again IMHO, if the Pac-2 was getting $10-12.5M in 2025, they would be crowing about it. Especially if it were 12.5M. Instead, crickets.
 
I was going to ask what your source(s) were for the $10M number. So, a random Reddit post and an X post. About as credible as Canzano (as in zero) IMHO. What I heard from equally unreliable sources was the $6.5M mentioned by another poster.

Again IMHO, if the Pac-2 was getting $10-12.5M in 2025, they would be crowing about it. Especially if it were 12.5M. Instead, crickets.
When is your school going to join….

The Darkside?
 
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I was going to ask what your source(s) were for the $10M number. So, a random Reddit post and an X post. About as credible as Canzano (as in zero) IMHO. What I heard from equally unreliable sources was the $6.5M mentioned by another poster.

Again IMHO, if the Pac-2 was getting $10-12.5M in 2025, they would be crowing about it. Especially if it were 12.5M. Instead, crickets.
Cantzano is probably the one that cause the $10 millions per year number. The dude have been harping about it. Monty have been saying that it will be lower. About $2-4 millions per year lower. Which would made BSU very pissy.
 
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Cantzano is probably the one that cause the $10 millions per year number. The dude have been harping about it. Monty have been saying that it will be lower. About $2-4 millions per year lower. Which would made BSU very pissy.

Go look up the Dan Wolken article in THE USA Today from September of last year. A lot of what he said about the PAC is playing out.

Im loathe to speak in absolutes, but the early 15-18 million per school initially floated was...Wildly optimistic.

You can't take a bunch of schools with a 6-8 million dollar valuation and somehow say they average 10 million.
 
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Go look up the Dan Wolken article in THE USA Today from September of last year. A lot of what he said about the PAC is playing out.

Im loathe to speak in absolutes, but the early 15-18 million per school initially floated was...Wildly optimistic.

You can't take a bunch of schools with a 6-8 million dollar valuation and somehow say they average 10 million.
In the meantime, UNLV's valuation have been looped up since Dan Mullen came aboard. If he make the CFP in his first year, the UNLV valuation will spiked even further.
 
Wouldn’t this be something…

3 years ago we were still stuck with Arroyo and now look at us!
Look At Us Paul Rudd GIF
Look At Us Paul Rudd GIF by First We Feast
 
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UNLV's bonds might be a good investment for those who need 7% return or more. There is a bond for fans and alumni to buy into right?
Harvard guaranteed 7.72% on their 10 years bond annually. If UNLV dont have something like this someone should start one. It might get an infusion of funds into the school and athletic department.
 
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Just shows you how lazy and incompetent athletics has been over the past 20 years to not invest sooner in football program...
Could not agree more, how do you keep your jobs being that lousy… no vision at all.

We should have been hiring former HC’s for both football and basketball decades ago!
 
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