As others have mentioned, Dodd's comments on Big12 expansion might be rooting in past economics.
Unless the school added is going to bring $40M+/school annually, then it doesn't make sense to expand the Big12. I can't think of a reason ISU would want to add Cincinnati, Houston, UCF, etc. if they dilute ISU's TV revenue payout.
As others have mentioned, the paradigm might change with the next round of TV contract negotiations that will be negotiated over the next 3 years.
If schools like Texas and OU feel they are falling behind schools like Alabama, A&M, Ohio State or Michigan because of money. IMO an incremental solution of adding schools like Cincinnati, Mizzou, Nebraska, SMU or even the Arizona schools isn't going to bring in incremental money. They could look to blow up the Big 12 & Pac 12 and create a super conference of high revenue/large population teams.
Something like the below might create a conference that could compete with the Big12 and SEC for maximum revenues per school. I went with an 11 conference league because IMO that is ideal. Play 10 conference games and 2 non conference in football and allows for round robin 20 game basketball schedule.
South/West 11 Conference
Texas ($223.9M)
Oklahoma ($163.1M)
Washington ($133.8M)
Oregon ($127.5M)
Arizona State ($121.7M)
Kansas ($121.6M)
UCLA ($108.4M)
Arizona ($105.1M)
Utah ($99.5M)
USC (Private)
Stanford (Private)
Those on the outside looking in would be:
WVU ($102.7M) - Geographic reasons
Texas Tech ($96.6M)
Iowa State ($95.4M)
Oklahoma State ($95.3M)
Colorado ($94.9M)
Kansas State ($89.9M)
California ($87.5M)
Oregon State ($82.0M)
Washington State ($71.7M)
Baylor (Private)
TCU (Private)
Unless the school added is going to bring $40M+/school annually, then it doesn't make sense to expand the Big12. I can't think of a reason ISU would want to add Cincinnati, Houston, UCF, etc. if they dilute ISU's TV revenue payout.
As others have mentioned, the paradigm might change with the next round of TV contract negotiations that will be negotiated over the next 3 years.
- Do we see a mix of TV rights and subscription base like ESPN+. It will be interesting if Netflix, Prime or YouTube, etc. jump into the game to gain subscribers.
- Do we see conferences going to a direct to consumer models. With SmartTVs and tools like Roku, there aren't a lot of barriers for entities like Conferences (or the NFL) to go broadcast directly to the consumer.
- There have been reports of the P5 schools breaking off from the remainder of D1 schools. The Knight Commission recently reiterated this recommendation. If that happens, do the P5 schools negotiate a single TV contract instead of each conference doing so. If this happens, the idea of 14-16 team conferences become obsolete. Instead we would see 10-11 team divisions that might work nicely with an 8 team playoff.
If schools like Texas and OU feel they are falling behind schools like Alabama, A&M, Ohio State or Michigan because of money. IMO an incremental solution of adding schools like Cincinnati, Mizzou, Nebraska, SMU or even the Arizona schools isn't going to bring in incremental money. They could look to blow up the Big 12 & Pac 12 and create a super conference of high revenue/large population teams.
Something like the below might create a conference that could compete with the Big12 and SEC for maximum revenues per school. I went with an 11 conference league because IMO that is ideal. Play 10 conference games and 2 non conference in football and allows for round robin 20 game basketball schedule.
South/West 11 Conference
Texas ($223.9M)
Oklahoma ($163.1M)
Washington ($133.8M)
Oregon ($127.5M)
Arizona State ($121.7M)
Kansas ($121.6M)
UCLA ($108.4M)
Arizona ($105.1M)
Utah ($99.5M)
USC (Private)
Stanford (Private)
Those on the outside looking in would be:
WVU ($102.7M) - Geographic reasons
Texas Tech ($96.6M)
Iowa State ($95.4M)
Oklahoma State ($95.3M)
Colorado ($94.9M)
Kansas State ($89.9M)
California ($87.5M)
Oregon State ($82.0M)
Washington State ($71.7M)
Baylor (Private)
TCU (Private)