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The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

I have a note that the Big 12 was an average of $34.5 million. I think they did a press release a few months back.

What is interesting is how flat the Big 10 has been since they got their new contract. BTN revenues declining?

Big 10 average distributions by year (UNL, MD and RU are averaged in, continuing members got more)

16-17 36.3 million
17-18 49.0 million
18-19 50.6 million approximately (don't have RU and MD, continuing schools got 55.6 which was 1.6 million up from 17-18 and total revenue up $22 million)
19-20 49.3 million
20-21 44.2 million (calculated from the article 671-52 divided by 14)
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.


https://richmond.com/sports/college/teel...dbfaf.html
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.
(05-21-2022 03:07 PM)random asian guy Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.

In the early 90s, they were #1. That was when basketball was a higher % of conference revenues.

From the figures I have they were 3rd in 2014-15, but quickly slipped back to 5th.
With their long term contract, unless they renegotiate, they may find it hard not to fall back into 5th. They certainly won't stay ahead of the Pac.
(05-21-2022 03:24 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 03:07 PM)random asian guy Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.

In the early 90s, they were #1. That was when basketball was a higher % of conference revenues.

From the figures I have they were 3rd in 2014-15, but quickly slipped back to 5th.
With their long term contract, unless they renegotiate, they may find it hard not to fall back into 5th. They certainly won't stay ahead of the Pac.

If the Big 12 can get more than the ACC without Texas/Oklahoma, Bob Bowlsby or whoever the new commissioner is needs to come with me when I next ask my boss for a raise.
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

^^THIS^^
(05-21-2022 03:07 PM)random asian guy Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.

The ACC might have been third in the late 80's or early 90's, but most likely 4th. The B1G and PAC would have been 1 & 2 at the time and maybe the B12 3rd. I do know the SEC was behind the ACC about 2 million at the time, but everyone was within 5 million of each other back then so it wasn't that big of a deal, unlike today.

The issue here is that playing 10 games when the PAC played less than half of a season and the B1G played a little more than half, and when the B12 had a lot cancellations due to protocols, and the ACC got the boost from having 10 games with ND which boosted audience and ad rates.

The ACC revenue may hover in this range now, but the others will return to normal. The new B12 will be a mystery. But all 3 get new deals.

I'd say that until 2035 the positioning is a one off.
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.

No BS or spun numbers......figures came directly off of the ACC's tax return.

Smart move by Swofford to take advantage of what ever opportunities that happened to come the ACC's way.
(05-21-2022 04:07 PM)XLance Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.

No BS or spun numbers......figures came directly off of the ACC's tax return.

Smart move by Swofford to take advantage of what ever opportunities that happened to come the ACC's way.

These numbers make it starkly clear how much more smartly the SEC and ACC handled the virus year of 2020 compared to the woeful decisions made by the B1G and PAC.

They also show that the ACCN is a real thing, it is producing real money for the conference.
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!
I have been saying the ACC will be #3 for awhile now! They have a real shot if getting to 50M by 2023 and then after that it will be interesting what the divisionless model and 9 Conf games will bring to their contract.
(05-22-2022 04:18 AM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 04:07 PM)XLance Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.

No BS or spun numbers......figures came directly off of the ACC's tax return.

Smart move by Swofford to take advantage of what ever opportunities that happened to come the ACC's way.

These numbers make it starkly clear how much more smartly the SEC and ACC handled the virus year of 2020 compared to the woeful decisions made by the B1G and PAC.

They also show that the ACCN is a real thing, it is producing real money for the conference.

For the most part in terms of the media, the ACC schools are in regions with dense population centers and growth. They could do appreciably better with TV revenue. They signed that long-term contract thinking "security" and "locking-in" members, and less-so about instilling a negotiated, graduating scale of revenue enhancements. Still, they are banking enough to hold a #3 position for the short-term. By comparison, the PAC has the flexibility to make moves that improve their positioning if wise decisions are pursued. How much they will, is to be determined.
(05-21-2022 03:24 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 03:07 PM)random asian guy Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.

In the early 90s, they were #1. That was when basketball was a higher % of conference revenues.

From the figures I have they were 3rd in 2014-15, but quickly slipped back to 5th.
With their long term contract, unless they renegotiate, they may find it hard not to fall back into 5th. They certainly won't stay ahead of the Pac.

I don't think any of this says much, the South played more than the North, and the far west Pac played less than the Big did. #s will float back to the norm play does. The AAC may well stay #3 but the Gap to Big will grow as Big returns to normal. PAC and B12 likely will lag some with new Tv deals.
I wonder how the unexpectedly high revenue distribution by the ACC influenced Jack Swarbrick’s recent comments. ND’s media distribution increased by nearly 50% after a last minute deal with the ACC. A thoughtful arrangement with ESPN and the ACC could be a dramatically larger financial windfall…if ND actually needs a game changer (as Swarbrick seems to suggest).
(05-21-2022 03:07 PM)random asian guy Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:45 PM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

SEC: 54.6 million per school average

B1G: 45.3 million per school average

ACC: 36.2 million per school average

B12: 32-35 million (post season money the variable) per school range

PAC: 19.8 million per school average

The moral of the story is if you play they pay. If you don't they won't!

Is this the first time ever that the ACC takes the #3 spot in terms of the total revenue and the average payout? It’s going to be interesting to see if the ACC can stay there.

If I’m not mistaken, the ACC was #1 in media payouts in their first season as a 12 team league. I believe it was $12 million per school.
(05-22-2022 04:18 AM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 04:07 PM)XLance Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.

No BS or spun numbers......figures came directly off of the ACC's tax return.

Smart move by Swofford to take advantage of what ever opportunities that happened to come the ACC's way.

These numbers make it starkly clear how much more smartly the SEC and ACC handled the virus year of 2020 compared to the woeful decisions made by the B1G and PAC.

They also show that the ACCN is a real thing, it is producing real money for the conference.

I thought that 2020 COVID year, ND's NBC football money got rolled into ACC's full pot and the whole thing got split 15 ways. i.e. rather than ND keeping their NBC money and getting a reduced non-football 1/15th allsports.

Edited to add - TerryD's linked article from the Richmond Times-Dispatch points to the ND NBC money as the reason for increase.
(05-22-2022 02:13 PM)slhNavy91 Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-22-2022 04:18 AM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 04:07 PM)XLance Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-21-2022 12:03 PM)bullet Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-20-2022 07:25 PM)quo vadis Wrote: [ -> ]The ACC generated $578m in 2020-2021, not experiencing much of a pinch from the pandemic.

This worked out to $36m per school, and that was with Notre Dame receiving $34m for participating as a football member.

ACC TV revenue was up to $397m from $333 million the year before, as more ACCN revenue poured in.

In contrast, the PAC generated only $344m in 2020-2021, a decline of over $150m compared to the previous year. The PAC was hammered due to canceled football games which reduced media payouts.

That worked out to a paltry $20m a school.

The B1G also took a hit. Its truncated football season cost it money, knocking payouts down to about $44m from $54m the year before.

The SEC and ACC were wise to play full football schedules in 2020.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nc...855686002/

https://pac-12.com/article/2022/05/20/pa...al-results

Where did you find those ACC figures you quoted above? I just saw a range listed in the article with no specific mention of ND. Maybe I missed it.

No BS or spun numbers......figures came directly off of the ACC's tax return.

Smart move by Swofford to take advantage of what ever opportunities that happened to come the ACC's way.

These numbers make it starkly clear how much more smartly the SEC and ACC handled the virus year of 2020 compared to the woeful decisions made by the B1G and PAC.

They also show that the ACCN is a real thing, it is producing real money for the conference.

I thought that 2020 COVID year, ND's NBC football money got rolled into ACC's full pot and the whole thing got split 15 ways. i.e. rather than ND keeping their NBC money and getting a reduced non-football 1/15th allsports.

Edited to add - TerryD's linked article from the Richmond Times-Dispatch points to the ND NBC money as the reason for increase.

The NBC money was a part of the ACC's increase, but honestly, it dragged the per school payout DOWN. Here's a breakdown of the ACC revenue streams:

NBC $22.0 M - because Notre Dame was "all in" in 2020-21.
ESPN $277.2 M - based on a 4.1% annual escalator.
ACCN $98.2 M - backed out from know total TV revenue.
NCAA $64.1 M - they played basketball in 2021.
bowls $109.4 M - down due to cancelled bowls, teams opting out
other $7.4 M - backed out from known total overall; down from previous years; likely includes revenue from ACC Basketball Tournament and ACC Football Championship ticket sales.


Here's the "tl;dnr" version:

Prognosis:
NBC money goes away - but so does most of Notre Dame's share; net gain for ACC.
ESPN money will continue to escalate +4.1%/year until 2036.
ACCN money will go up considerably now that Comcast is on board.
NCAA money depends on March Madness performance.
bowl money should get back to normal.
other money should get back to normal.

Bottom Line:
ACC revenue will be flat during the non-Contract Bowl year of 2021-22, then jump at least $30M+ (i.e. $2M+/school) in FY 2022-23 (begins July 1st of this year).
(05-24-2022 07:55 AM)Hokie Mark Wrote: [ -> ](snip)

The NBC money was a part of the ACC's increase, but honestly, it dragged the per school payout DOWN. Here's a breakdown of the ACC revenue streams:

NBC $22.0 M - because Notre Dame was "all in" in 2020-21.

It's cool that, thanks to ND participation in ACC football in 2020, we finally got a firm peg on how much ND's current TV deal pays them.
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