• Loading stock data...
Saturday, April 19, 2025

Oregon State, Washington State Make Contingency Plan as Lawsuit Delayed

  • The latest court ruling confirmed OSU and WSU won’t win control of the conference for at least a month.
  • They’re in the final stages of a “scheduling partnership” with the Mountain West for next year, a report said.
Oregon State and Washington State appear to be making contingency plans to operate as a two-school conference while their lawsuit against the Pac-12 winds through state court.
Abigail Dollins/Statesman Journal

Oregon State and Washington State appear to be making contingency plans to operate as a two-school conference next season while their lawsuit against the Pac-12 winds through state court.

A new court filing on Tuesday confirmed that OSU and WSU won’t win control of the conference for at least a month. 

Around the same time that the filing was sent to reporters, news broke that the schools are in the “final stages” of creating a football “scheduling partnership” with the Mountain West for next year. The Pac-2 would shell out $14 million in fees to the Mountain West.

The future of the Pac-12 rests on a court decision.

The Pac-12 Plays Its Final Regular-Season Game. Then A Court Decides Its..

The conference’s future rests with a court decision.
November 24, 2023

In September, the schools sued the Pac-12 in order to determine who has control of the conference after the other 10 members signaled their plans to depart next year. 

A judge recently granted a preliminary injunction stating that the “Pac-2” have sole control of the board until a trial can provide a final ruling. The decision effectively granted the schools power of the conference’s assets, liabilities, and intellectual property.

But on Tuesday, Washington’s Supreme Court commissioner issued a decision stating the Pac-2 won’t be able to take control of the conference board until there is another ruling on an appeal in the decision — which won’t come until at least mid-December.

“The decision effectively ensures that all 12 current members will have an equal voice in determining how the revenue our schools earned this year is distributed and utilized while the Court considers our arguments,” the 10 departing schools said in a statement.

The decision cast doubt on the lower court that, per Pac-12 bylaws, the 10 departing schools no longer have eligibility to participate or vote on the conference’s board. “In short, this is a debatable issue,” the commissioner wrote.

In a joint statement, WSU and OSU spokespeople said they were “disappointed” in the ruling. “We did not create or seek these circumstances, but Oregon State and Washington State remain committed to taking aggressive action to protect our universities, ensure accountability and transparency, safeguard student-athletes and the Pac-12 Conference, and preserve our options moving forward,” they said.

The spokespeople added they’ll be seeking a review of the latest decision. 

The schools won’t be able to determine the future of the Pac-12 by the end of the calendar year.

The scheduling partnership with the Mountain West will offer fans, players, and potential recruits and transfers at least some semblance of what their season could look like next year. After all, it will likely pit the schools against programs they could play in a rebuilt Pac-12 — or in the Mountain West if they decide to join the conference.

The Pac-2 will have a grace period to attempt to rebuild an eight-member conference and maintain their FBS eligibility, according to NCAA rules. But because of a recent College Football Playoff decision, they likely won’t be eligible to participate in the expanded 12-team CFP.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Ohio

Oregon Sues Former Running Backs Coach Over $200K Buyout Dispute

Carlos Locklyn and his former employer are fighting over his contract terms.
Refs

College Football Cracking Down on Fake Injuries

Players have allegedly faked injuries for free timeouts and slowing opposing offenses.
exclusive

Inside Nico Iamaleava’s Ugly Breakup With Tennessee

Iamaleava’s representatives claim to FOS he didn’t push for more NIL money.

Featured Today

Dec 9, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) watches as center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates after making a three point basket to clinch a win against the Toronto Raptors near the end of the fourth quarter at Scotiabank Arena

Same Owner, New Knicks: New York’s Remarkable Rebound

The franchise’s renaissance didn’t happen overnight.
Masters
April 18, 2025

Why The Masters Quietly Cracked Down on Ticket Resellers

Insiders expect big changes are coming to ticketing at Augusta National.
Jul 29, 2024; Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France; France center Dominique Malonga (14) and guard Marine Johannes (23) celebrate after defeating Canada during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Stade Pierre-Mauroy
April 13, 2025

‘Has to Change’: The WNBA’s International Player Problem

As more global stars arrive, the “prioritization” rule is causing tension.
Yamine Lamal Barcelona
April 12, 2025

Lamine Yamal: The Pressure and Price of Barcelona’s Young Prodigy

Lamine Yamal is a teenage superstar. Can Barcelona afford him?
Apr 7, 2025; San Antonio, TX, USA; Florida Gators players hoist the trophy after defeating the Houston Cougars in the national championship game of the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA Tournament at the Alamodome.

How Florida’s Men’s Basketball Title Run Is Fueling NIL Fundraising

The collective earned more than $1 million during Final Four week alone.
George Mason
April 16, 2025

Travel Agent Pleads Guilty To Scamming George Mason Men’s Basketball

The man admitted to running a college sports Ponzi scheme.
April 16, 2025

CFB’s Record Transfer Portal Surge Hits 3,200 (and Counting)

More than 3,000 players are considering changing schools.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

This week, Two-time Super Bowl Champion and CBS NFL analyst Logan Ryan joins us to talk the business of sports on our third installment of Portfolio Players.
April 15, 2025

Amended House v. NCAA Settlement Proposal Does Not Adjust Roster Limits

The judge is expected to issue a final ruling within the next few weeks.
Maxx Crosby
April 14, 2025

Maxx Crosby Is First NFL Player To Make College Assistant GM Leap

Stephen Curry and Trae Young took similar basketball roles last month.
April 13, 2025

Iamaleava Departure Exposes Cracks in NIL Era As Criticism Mounts

Many coaches have strong takes about the Tennessee situation.
Iamaleava
April 11, 2025

Nico Iamaleava Leaves Tennessee After NIL Standoff

Tennessee did not give the QB the raise he sought.