Friday, May 29, 2026

How the Pac-12 Rose From the Ashes in 2024

The conference began the year with just two members, no TV deal, and no future outlook. It’s made a remarkable comeback.

Nov 23, 2024; Corvallis, Oregon, USA; Oregon State Beavers students celebrate during the fourth quarter against the Washington State Cougars at Reser Stadium.
Craig Strobeck-Imagn Images
Aug 17, 2025; Harrison, New Jersey, USA; A general view shows Sports Illustrated Stadium and Gotham FC logos before the game between Gotham FC and the Houston Dash.
Exclusive

Several Longtime Writers Laid Off at Sports Illustrated

Writers Greg Bishop and Michael Rosenberg were laid off in a round of cuts on Friday.
Read Now
May 29, 2026 |

The Pac-12 began 2024 with an uncertain future, and ended the year by having to watch two of its former members earn coveted first-round byes in the expanded College Football Playoff.

The league was about to lose all but two members—Oregon State and Washington State—after a vicious round of conference realignment picked the Pac-12 apart in 2022 and 2023. It had an incompetent (and largely absent) commissioner in George Kliavkoff. It had no television deal and planned to lay off most of its league employees. 

But by the time the league rings in 2025, it will have succeeded in an unprecedented resurrection. Led by a new commissioner, Teresa Gould (who had spent years at the conference office and working for Pac-12 programs), the Pac-12 was able to create a new blueprint to run the conference, sign a football media deal, and eventually ink agreements to add seven new members in 2026.  

The league still has a ways to go—it needs a media deal, another member, and litigation to settle. And it won’t have power conference status. 

Here’s how, after a roller coaster of a year, the 108-year-old Pac-12 has rebuilt—and will live to see the next era of college sports. 


Before courting new schools, Oregon State and Washington State set out to rebuild their conference’s infrastructure.

They had plenty of resources: In March, Oregon State and Washington State finalized a divorce agreement with Pac-12 departing members that gave them not only the rights to the Pac-12 intellectual property, but also a war chest of more than $100 million between exit fees and other assets. The schools hired Gould, agreed to an affiliate membership with the West Coast Conference for Olympic sports, and inked a football scheduling partnership with the Mountain West for the 2024–2025 season—guaranteeing WSU and OSU would have a full slate of games against local FBS programs.

Sep 23, 2023; Pullman, Washington, USA; Washington State Cougars fans holds up a sign about the Pac @ during a game against the Oregon State Beavers in the second half at Gesa Field at Martin Stadium. Washington State won 38-35.
James Snook/Imagn Images

In the spring, the league reimagined its Pac-12 Networks assets. The league put the network off the air and launched Pac-12 Enterprises in its place: a company that would produce Pac-12 sporting events, as well as providing for-hire services for other local college and pro sports events—including offering up their new, state-of-the-art Pac-12 Networks production studio. The league then signed a modest media-rights deal for home football games with Fox Sports and The CW.

By the time football season kicked off in August, OSU and WSU were set up for the 2024 season. But their long-term future still hung in the balance.


In early September, the Pac-12 and Mountain West said they had agreed not to extend their scheduling partnership from 2025–2026. The news came just as their original partnership was beginning.

The decision was due to a financial dispute, Front Office Sports previously reported: The Pac-12 was paying $14 million in fees to participate and unsuccessfully tried to negotiate. The question of where the Pac-12 would find future opponents didn’t last long. On the morning of Sept. 12, the league announced a blockbuster realignment move: It would welcome four Mountain West schools—Boise State, Fresno State, San Diego State, and Colorado State—to the league starting in 2026. 

The leagues, which previously appeared to be in the middle of a happy courtship—and considering a formal marriage—had become bitter enemies in the matter of a week

The Mountain West scrambled to try to put together a contract to keep its remaining members together—an agreement that every school but Utah State, which also bolted for the Pac-12, signed. The Mountain West has since granted Hawai‘i a full membership, and also added UTEP, Grand Canyon, and most recently UC Davis. The Pac-12 beefed up its basketball slate with Gonzaga.

Oct 26, 2024; Berkeley, California, USA; A view of the Pac-12 logo on the jersey of Oregon State Beavers punter Josh Green (37) during the second quarter against the California Golden Bears at California Memorial Stadium.
Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

The Pac-12 still had a problem on its hands, however. The football scheduling partnership included a clause saying it was liable to pay the Mountain West tens of millions of dollars for poaching Mountain West schools. According to a copy of the contract that FOS obtained, the Pac-12 owed $55 million. 

Instead of paying, the league promptly filed a lawsuit against the Mountain West in an attempt to invalidate the contract. A few months later, Colorado State, Utah State, and Boise State filed a lawsuit of their own trying to get out of having to pay Mountain West exit fees estimated to start at around $19 million per school.


As it stands, the Pac-12 will live for one more year as a two-member league, and then transition into a league with eight full members, seven of which play FBS football. (On Dec. 11, the conference filed applications for “Pac-9,” “Pac-10,” “Pac-11,” “Pac-13,” and “Pac-14” with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, perhaps as a contingency for expanding beyond eight members.)

But the league still has several major unresolved issues. 

It’s currently in the midst of exploring a long-term media-rights deal, which it hopes to sign before adding any other members—a task it has enlisted media-rights consulting firm Octagon to help with. A media-rights deal is the crux of what keeps a conference together, providing financial stability and, sometimes, an additional contract called a Grant of Rights that requires schools to stick together for a certain number of years. 

The league also has more work to do to maintain its existing status in the college football landscape. The Pac-12 was already stripped of its “autonomy” voting status in the NCAA governing structure, and it is no longer considered a power conference as it relates to College Football Playoff revenue distribution. But if it wants to remain an FBS conference at all, it must find one more full FBS-playing member by 2026. NCAA rules require FBS leagues to have at least eight full members.

And, of course, the league will have to resolve its legal dispute with the Mountain West, so the two can sever ties for good. 

Despite the long to-do list, however, the Pac-12 has a more stable future now than it has at any point in the past year and a half. The comeback is nothing short of remarkable.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Frances Cabral-Delaney

How Arsenal Fandom Went ‘Manic’

“People do not become Arsenal fans because it’s easy,” says Zohran Mamdani.
Dec 6, 2025; Arlington, TX, USA; BYU Cougars safety Faletau Satuala (11) tackles Texas Tech Red Raiders tight end Terrance Carter Jr. (7) during the game between the Red Raiders and the Cougars at AT&T Stadium.

Big 12 Spring Meetings: CFP Expansion and Private-Capital Deal

Most Big 12 leaders support a 24-team CFP, though its execution is still unclear.
Aug 17, 2025; Harrison, New Jersey, USA; A general view shows Sports Illustrated Stadium and Gotham FC logos before the game between Gotham FC and the Houston Dash.
exclusive

Several Longtime Writers Laid Off at Sports Illustrated

Writers Greg Bishop and Michael Rosenberg were laid off in a round of cuts on Friday.
May 19, 2023; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Mystics forward Elena Delle Donne (11) talks with New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart (30) prior to the opening tip-off at Entertainment & Sports Arena.
exclusive

New WNBA CBA Will Pay $14M to Retired Players

The WNBA and WNBPA announced the full CBA was finalized Friday.

Featured Today

May 23, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Fans participate in a tarp off during a MLB game between the Los Angeles Angels and the Texas Rangers at Angel Stadium

‘Tarps Off’: How Shirtless Fans Took Over MLB

The viral movement began with the SFA club baseball team.
Apr 6, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh (29) walks to the on deck circle during the game against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field
May 28, 2026

Why Ballparks Are Louder Than Ever

Some stadiums sound like veritable nightclubs. How did we get here?
May 24, 2026; Evanston, IL, USA; Northwestern Wildcats attack Kathryn Ratanaproeksa (13) shoots against the North Carolina Tar Heels during the first half at Martin Stadium
May 26, 2026

Can Women’s Lacrosse Buck the Trend in College Sports?

The sport is fighting to prove its worth in the revenue-sharing era.
May 22, 2026

Big Money on the Line on Premier League’s Final Day

Arsenal has won the title, but millions are still at stake.
Imagn Images/Front Office Sports

Crystal Ball: Our Predictions for the Business of Sports in 2026

Here’s what FOS journalists think could be on the horizon.
Nov 10, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs fans hold fathead signs of Travis Kelce (not pictured) and Taylor Swift during the second half of the game against the Denver Broncos at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium
December 31, 2024

Most Talked-About FOS Stories of 2024

The biggest headlines, scandals, and untold stories at FOS in 2024.
Oct 1, 2024; Portland, OR, USA; Portland Thorns FC defender Meghan Klingenberg (25) passes th ball against Santa Fe during the first half at Providence Park
January 1, 2025

Saudi PIF’s Influence Is Growing After a Big 2024

Saudi Arabia left even more fingerprints on global sports.
Sponsored

The Hidden Economy of Race Weekend

Learn more about the Vintage Flying Museum and how Spectrum Business is helping them achieve their business goals while fueling their dreams.
December 30, 2024

An Unprecedented Year In Stadiums Sets Up a Big 2025

Several major stadium and arena projects overcame obstacles to gain approval.
December 28, 2024

Crystal Ball: Our Predictions for 2025

Our staffers look toward 2025.
Nov 10, 2024; Munich, Germany; The NFL shield logo at midfield during the 2024 NFL Munich Game at Allianz Arena.
December 27, 2024

The Year of Private Equity In Sports

The NFL’s new structure capped a watershed year in the space.
Apr 12, 2024; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Jon Rahm reacts to his putt on the 18th green during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.
December 26, 2024

The PGA Tour and LIV Golf’s Year of Limbo—Again

After another year of stalemate, plenty of burning questions remain.