• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, January 14, 2026

With New Lawsuit, Florida AG Backs FSU in Fight to Exit the ACC

  • The lawsuit alleged that the ACC was ‘wrongfully withholding’ media contracts from the public.
  • The content of these contracts, which are essentially kept under lock and key, could decide whether FSU is on the hook for $500 million in exit fees.
Melina Myers-USA TODAY Sports

Florida’s attorney general, Ashley Moody, has now officially entered the legal proceedings over the fate of the ACC.

On Thursday, Moody filed a lawsuit in Leon County, Fla., against the conference alleging that it has illegally kept contracts governing its media rights with ESPN secret from the AG’s office and the public. The lawsuit is a clear attempt to support FSU in its quest to depart the conference early.

Moody originally requested the contracts in January, shortly after FSU filed a December lawsuit with the intent of leaving the ACC without having to pay nine figures in exit fees. The FSU suit alleged the conference was negligent in leading schools through a period of change in college sports, and that the contracts that bound it together were unenforceable. At issue: the ACC’s bylaws, the media contract with ESPN, and the “grant of rights,” a document that allows the conference to sell schools’ media rights on their behalf. The conference has held that because of these contracts, FSU must pay more than $500 million in exit fees and other payments if it wants to leave the ACC before the media agreement expires in 2036. 

Clemson filed a lawsuit in March also arguing the ACC’s contracts are not legally enforceable. Both schools were hit with countersuits from the conference itself.

Moody’s complaint, reviewed by Front Office Sports, does not make a case that the ACC’s contracts are invalid, as FSU and Clemson’s lawsuits do. It simply argues that the contracts are subject to Florida public records laws. 

“The ACC is asking a state entity—Florida State University—to potentially pay and lose more than a half a billion dollars but is refusing to produce the documents related to that outrageous price tag,” Moody said in a statement. “We sent a public records request to the ACC in January, but they failed to fully comply. We are taking legal action against the ACC for wrongfully withholding these important public records.”

The complaint begins with a dramatic flourish: “Under secret media rights contracts located somewhere in the North Carolina headquarters of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), the fate of hundreds of millions of dollars of a Florida public university is written.” It says the ACC does not allow any personnel, including from member schools, to retain copies of the agreement. Any university personnel must travel to the ACC’s headquarters in Charlotte to read the agreement in person. (It even sneaks in a reference to FSU’s perceived snub from the 2023–24 College Football Playoff—a moment that FSU itself considered the last straw in whether to challenge the ACC in court.)

While ESPN is not a party to this particular lawsuit, it will likely have something to say. The network had previously filed a brief in the ACC’s countersuit against FSU arguing that the media-rights agreement should be filed under seal—and therefore kept from the public—because the contents of the contract amounted to trade secrets. The brief also suggested that FSU may have committed a felony by revealing certain details of the contract previously.

The lawsuit is the latest in a larger trend of state attorneys general involving themselves in college sports business through litigation. State AGs have led the charge in lawsuits against the NCAA’s transfer restrictions and its rules governing name, image, and likeness deals.

The ACC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

EuroLeague Defends Its Turf As NBA Pitches League to Investors

EuroLeague threatened legal action if the NBA tries to poach contracted teams.
Indiana Hoosiers defensive back D'Angelo Ponds (5) rushes the ball Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, during the Peach Bowl and semifinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Oregon Ducks at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.

College Sports Watchdog Will Enforce Rules Without Legal Backing

Without signed participant agreements, the enforcement body may not have any teeth.

Feds Say They’re Investigating College Sports Agents 

The FTC is attempting to enforce agent regulations in college sports.

College Basketball’s Former Pros Are Off to Extremely Slow Starts 

An NBA draft pick is averaging three points a game in college.

Featured Today

Black Rabbit

The Netflix Star Who Makes Sure NBA Players Have Clean Towels

How a Nets staffer landed a breakout role on “Black Rabbit.”
January 9, 2026

NHL Ditched Its Dress Code. Hockey’s Fashion Era Arrived Quickly

With no dress code, impeccably dressed players are seeing big-money deals.
January 6, 2026

Hockey in Florida Was Once a Risk. Now It’s Thriving

The state of Florida has become a traditional—and highly lucrative—market.
Dec 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) reacts after scoring a basket against the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Crypto.com Arena
January 4, 2026

Why Pro Sports Team Valuations Will Keep Climbing in 2026

Asset scarcity and increasing media-rights deals underpin soaring valuations.

Mark Cuban Has Questions About CFP Championship Ticket Prices

Indiana-Miami is trending to be the most expensive CFP title game ever.
January 11, 2026

Marcus Freeman Won’t Be Charged for Battery After Wrestling Meet Incident

Freeman was accused of battery at his son’s wrestling match.
January 11, 2026

CFP Title Game Ticket Prices on Pace to Be Most Expensive Ever

Demand is high for the Miami-Indiana matchup.
Sponsored

ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025: Inside the Technology Shaping the Future of..

At ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025, ESPN showcased how AI, immersive tech, and a rebuilt direct-to-consumer platform are redefining the future of sports media.
January 9, 2026

Billionaire-Backed Hoosiers Heading to First CFP Championship

The championship game is the culmination of a remarkable two-year run.
Oregon Ducks quarterback Bo Nix greets Phil Knight after defeating the Liberty Flames to win the Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium in Glendale on Jan. 1, 2024.
January 9, 2026

Oregon-Indiana Is a Battle of Billionaire-Backed Rosters

Both schools have their richest alumni funding NIL.
January 8, 2026

Miami Earns $20M With CFP National Championship Trip

No other power conference allows schools to keep all CFP prize money.
January 8, 2026

Demond Williams Walks Back Transfer Talk, to Stay at Washington

Washington threatened legal action to force him to honor his rev-share contract.