• Loading stock data...
Friday, April 18, 2025

The Pac-12’s Departing Members Have Inked Their Divorce Contract 

  • The settlement agreement, obtained by ‘FOS,’ is a direct resolution to a lawsuit brought this past fall.
  • OSU and WSU will likely have more than $100 million in cash to start their new two-member conference.
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The members of the Pac-12 have finalized their divorce papers—and the terms are very amenable to Oregon State and Washington State, the two schools that will remain in the conference come this summer.

On Monday, 12 existing schools confirmed that they have signed a settlement agreement regarding revenue distribution and voting rights in the Pac-12 going forward. (The settlement agreement was first reported by The Mercury News.) The settlement is a direct resolution to the lawsuit brought by Oregon State and Washington State last fall over who had voting power on the conference’s board, and therefore the ability to control all its assets, intellectual property, and even potential dissolution.

The conference’s two remaining members, WSU and OSU, appear to have a nine-figure financial cushion to use going forward. This cushion, as well as the entire conference, is now under the direction and leadership of new commissioner Teresa Gould, who began a two-year tenure March 1.

The 10 departing schools will each be able to take all but $6.5 million of their full 2024 conference distribution to their new homes, according to a copy of the agreement obtained by Front Office Sports. The leftover total of $65 million, made up of two separate fees, will remain with the conference entity and be in the control of WSU and OSU going forward. As expected, the schools will not have any claims to future revenue with a few exceptions—all of which were redacted from the contract. 

The rest of that cushion will come from the conference’s other assets. Their exact amount is unclear, but court documents suggested the conference had $43 million in net assets in 2022 excluding the Pac-12 Networks, which brought in about $50 million in net revenue.

If the conference dissolves before the last day of the fiscal year 2026, assets will be distributed among WSU and OSU as well as departing schools. But if the conference dissolves after that date, OSU and WSU can split the spoils for themselves. (It’s highly likely that the latter situation will come to pass, given that WSU and OSU have solidified their participation in the College Football Playoff for the next two years, and the conference has scheduling partnerships for all sports between now and the end of ’25–26.)

As for voting power, the main question in the lawsuit this fall, the Pac-12’s departing schools have agreed to have voting power only for issues that impact the 2024 season. They also have agreed to not attempt to dissolve the conference.

In a joint statement, OSU president Jayathi Murthy and WSU president Kirk Schulz called the agreement “fair and equitable.” The departing schools said they were “pleased” to finalize the agreement.

The conference unraveled this past summer, after previous commissioner George Kliavkoff failed to deliver a media-rights contract that the schools considered lucrative and stable. Stanford and Cal will join the ACC. Oregon, Washington, USC, and UCLA will become members of the Big Ten. Arizona State, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado will depart for the Big 12. Starting next year, the Pac-12 will be a two-member conference.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Kendrick Lamar

Drake Lawsuit Says Kendrick Lamar Defamed Him At Super Bowl

Drake says taking out the word “pedophile” didn’t erase the defamation.
exclusive

Shannon Sharpe Eyes $100M+ Podcast Deal As Volume Contract Expires

Sharpe’s podcasts have exploded in popularity over the last several years.
Masters

Why The Masters Quietly Cracked Down on Ticket Resellers

Insiders expect big changes are coming to ticketing at Augusta National.
Twins

Twins Attendance Plunges As Sale Drags On

At least one prominent suitor has dropped out of talks.

Featured Today

exclusive

Inside Nico Iamaleava’s Ugly Breakup With Tennessee

Iamaleava’s representatives claim to FOS he didn’t push for more NIL money.
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?
The pin flag on the second green flaps in the wind during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.
April 7, 2025

Inside The Masters: Traditions, Restrictions, and Gnomes

How the most exclusive major employs its own strict rules and operations.
Ohio

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

Carlos Locklyn and his former employer are fighting over his contract terms.
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.
April 17, 2025

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

The collective earned more than $1 million during Final Four week alone.
Refs
April 17, 2025

College Football Cracking Down on Fake Injuries

Players have allegedly faked injuries for free timeouts and slowing opposing offenses.
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 16, 2025

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

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