Jump to content
  • The issues facing college sports are so vast and so varied, it’s hard for anyone to truly grasp each aspect and the interplay between all of them.

    Yet no person is trying to alter its future (or at least guide it) more than Cody Campbell, the chairman of the Texas Tech board of regents.

    For those unaware, Campbell is a native Texan who played football for Mike Leach at Tech and then entered the professional world as an oil and gas man, eventually becoming a billionaire several times over.

    I spoke to Campbell, who has been running national TV advertisements for two weeks opposing the Score Act during college football games, yesterday evening.

    At the crux of Campbell’s argument are several vital suppositions:

    1. College sports is a public trust. The people (you and I, and every other fan out there) own the assets since most of the universities are taxpayer funded or state-owned.

    Sure, there are private schools like Harvard, SMU or Rice sprinkled in.

    But Texans effectively own UT, A&M, Tech, etc. In fact, most of college football nation-wide is comprised of large state universities. For example, 15 of the 16 schools in the SEC are public entities.

    So as owners of these universities, the public’s interest should come first.

    That’s important because it deals with us - every single one of us - being stewards of the opportunities for future generations of students, whether that’s football, rowing, basketball, softball, baseball, volleyball, etc.

    2. Campbell believes the current system is financially unsustainable for way too many colleges.

    Most schools rely on football and basketball to prop up revenue for the rest of their athletic department. But if some schools can no longer compete at the highest level in those two sports, their revenue will dwindle. The concern is that Olympic sports will be cut either at the outset or eventually in a futile attempt to fund the revenue-makers.

    The hardships, according to Campbell, are creating what amounts to a financial death spiral for college sports as we know it.

    3. Players deserve a real seat at the table. The current involvement of student athletes in NCAA committees is both minimal and largely performative.

    If there are two players and 10 beauracrats on a committee, who is anyone really listening to?

    **

    So what is Campbell actually proposing?

    First, he’s trying to tackle the financial issue.

    Campbell believes that TV and media rights holders are getting a steal.

    College football is by all accounts the second most popular sport in America behind only the NFL.

    Yet college sports media rights (all sports, not just football) are sold for less than half of what the fourth most popular sport (the NBA) receives.

    According to Campbell, college sports receives approximately $5bn per year in media rights agreements from its various partners. The NBA, a less popular sport, by contrast is in the $10bn range.

    How does that occur?

    Market segmentation.

    College football rights are sold in piecemeal fashion. The SEC does its own deal with ESPN. The Big 10, the Big 12, etc., all do the same.

    Campbell believes, and he says consultants back these claims, if college football pooled its rights together, instead of working separately, that there would effectively be an additional $7bn in financial value created annually (or $70bn  over a 10-year time frame).

    College sports would go from making $5bn a year to $12bn, thus being justly paid for being the second most popular sport. And that extra cash could be used to not only keep giving opportunities to all sports at all levels, it could also pay athletes their fair share of NIL.

    On the surface, that sounds like a financial windfall, and a healthy plan for all.

    But some, like the SEC and Big 10, likely think they would be carrying too much of the weight of other conferences. Why should Texas or Ohio State prop up Fresno State?

    Well, Campbell is not naive. He doesn’t think all parties should be treated the same in every single aspect. He said obviously some schools or conferences might share disproportionately in the additional money that media pooling would provide.

    And that’s where the negotiating would and should begin in Campbell’s mind.

    Surely, the Big 12 will ask for more money than the SEC thinks the Big 12 deserves. And vice versa. Just like the conferences have jockeyed for guaranteed slots in an expanded college football playoff.

    Campbell seems to welcome the negotiation on those topics. But he can’t do that unless (or until) the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 is repealed or amended.

    **

    Outside of the financial value brought about by the pooling of media rights, Campbell also believes there are other benefits to be gained by a repealing of the broadcast act.

    He thinks college football could then exert more control over the future of the game rather than ceding too much of that to the TV networks.

    The NFL is seen as a forward-thinking league who controls its media partners whereas college football is largely seen as a reactive one where the networks define the sport.

    In college football, the tail wags the dog way too often.

    Things such as times of games, match-ups, etc., could be easily altered.

    For example, should Texas really be playing a 2:30 game at home in late August just because TV execs say so?

    **

    Campbell believes financial change is just one part of the long-term solution to college sports.

    He believes there should be a parallel push for a new governing body other than the NCAA. The NCAA is “painfully beauracratic”, he says.

    For example, he says they recently reduced the number of subcommittees to rule on an issue from roughly 90 to down to 30.

    Thirty subcommittees? Good luck getting everyone on board in a timely manner.

    No wonder it took the NCAA 3+ years and millions of dollars to deal with something as clear cut as the Michigan sign-stealing scandal.

    As part of a new governance, there should be true athlete representation and negotiation. That representation would cover everything from salary cap, to bargaining rights, scholarship minimums for all sports, and everything in between.

    **

    Campbell’s argument is sound and well thought out.

    But it is concerning to the two major players in college football - the SEC and Big 10.

    Both of those leagues would likely have to cede some of their control over league members and their ability to negotiate their own TV deals to a pooled-party.

    Despite the potential financial windfall, the loss of control (or the threat of it) may be a bridge too far for the SEC or Big 10.

    So that is why college sports is stuck. College football is a great sport but it’s unable to effectively define its own future because too many folks want to protect their piece of the pie.

    **

    Solutions must be negotiated.

    Here’s a potential financial solution:

    If the pooling of money could create an additional $7bn in revenue, why not apportion the additional revenue on the same pro rata basis as current TV networks do?

    Would that work?

    Is that enough to keep not just the football team afloat but also the volleyball team at Fresno State fully funded? Is that enough to make NIL legitimate at Texas,  Ohio State and Texas Tech in football and basketball?

    I don’t know. But at least it’s a starting point for a discussion.

    Whatever rout this takes, we know that rules need to be changed. And convention needs to be challenged.

    Some smart folks need to get in a room and figure it out, not just keep kicking the can down the road.

    **

    To be clear, I’m not taking sides with Campbell, the SEC or the Big 10 here.

    I simply want what’s best for college sports for the long term.

    And what is that in my mind?

    Not reducing opportunities for students across the country, increasing athlete representation, and exerting control over networks in the interest of what is best for the game and the universities.

    The goals sound so simple.

    How do we get there is the issue.

    **

    Thanks to Cody Campbell for his willingness to discuss this topic.

     

     

     

    • Hook 'Em 22
    • Thanks 1

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    3 minutes ago, Glass Joe said:

    Yeah, I think Campbell is focused on 2031 when the media rights deals of the ACC and B12 expire.  And more importantly, the CFB Playoffs contract is up for renewal.  This will mark the Waterloo of college football as many of us have always known it.

    Campbell realizes the ACC powers are heading for P2 conferences (FSU, Clemson, Miami, UNC, and a few others), and the ACC as we now know it will go the way of the old Pac-12.

    When this happens in 2031, you’ll have something like 40-44 schools in the P2 conferences (today, it’s 34 schools, add ND, and add the top 6-7 schools that leave the ACC in 2031 = 42 schools).

    The media partners will then be faced with a big decision of the P2 conference media deals, and the CFB Playoff deal.  The issue will be:  do we close off the P2 with 42-44 schools?  Or, do we invite a few additional castoffs from the B12 and call it a 48-school P2 structure?  
     
    Campbell is trying to get Tech to be one of those small handful of B12 schools that gets an invitation to the P2 in 2031, should any B12 schools get invited at all.  I imagine the P2 will wind-up at 48 schools, so that leaves 5-6 schools openings, but the B12 schools will also be competing with those non-top 6 ACC schools that haven’t already been invited into the P2 (FSU, Clemson, UNC, Miami, UVA, et al).  
     
    Here is where things can get dicey.  Disney / ESPN already exclusively own the rights for the SEC and ACC schools.  They are likely to be the media partner that gets first dibs on the top ACC schools, since Disney controls their rights until 2036.  That means as the SEC expands to add top ACC schools, it’s likely to be adding schools that make sense for its geographic and demographic viewership.  That means the southeast U.S. and into the mid-Atlantic region.  More importantly, it does NOT extend to the western or midwestern U.S.

    That means FOX will be the media entity selecting the final 5-6 refugee schools from among the B12 and any ACC leftovers that SEC (Disney) doesn’t want.  How will FOX approach this decision?  Well, they have already invested in the west coast (USC, UCLA, UW, Oregon), but do they want to add a few schools to form a 6-8 school division?  Say, Arizona State and a Bay Area team (Cal or Stanford)?  What about adding some presence in the mountain states (Colorado, Utah)?  Or, does FOX want to buttress its presence in the mid-Atlantic media markets (Eastern time zone) to offset SEC encroachment?  Maybe WVU or UVA or VT?

    It doesn’t take too long to figure out that the B12 schools in the central / plains aren’t going to be the top choices here.  KU, ISU, KSU, Baylor, Tech, Okie State, etc.  There simply isn’t any incremental media revenue to be additive to a media rights deal by including these schools.  The Big Ten already owns the corn belt (Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana), so doubling down with ISU / KSU / KU / OSU makes little sense.

    I would say this to Campbell’s idea that growing the pie solves his problem:  Just  because the pie gets bigger, doesn’t mean your slice of it will too.   It’s still a competitive feeding situation, not just a bigger trough.

    A quick look at B12 football viewership plummeting in the last season (sans Texas and OU) tells you all you need to know about the individual value and viability of most of the current B12 schools.  And Campbell shouldn’t expect the executives at Disney and FOX to be too dumb to realize this as well.

     

    BINGO

    • Hook 'Em 2
    2 hours ago, Bobby Burton said:

    1. Campbell may be many things, but he’s not a hack. His only goal may even well be getting Texas Tech on an even playing field with Texas. I can’t discern his true goals, etc. But I can decidedly tell you he’s not a hack. The conversation we had was informative. He knew numbers, reasons, etc., and it wasn’t the sound of a hack.

    2. I too worry about Texas after Eltife. It’s the chief reason why I asked Governor Abbott about how he elects/chooses the BoR.

    i don't care what he does.  i am loving life not being in the same conference with those jackwagons.  keep it that way and he can do what he wants.

    i'm very concerned about #2.  I was around for the Foster board days.

    • Hook 'Em 2
    4 minutes ago, Glass Joe said:

    Yeah, I think Campbell is focused on 2031 when the media rights deals of the ACC and B12 expire.  And more importantly, the CFB Playoffs contract is up for renewal.  This will mark the Waterloo of college football as many of us have always known it.

    Campbell realizes the ACC powers are heading for P2 conferences (FSU, Clemson, Miami, UNC, and a few others), and the ACC as we now know it will go the way of the old Pac-12.

    When this happens in 2031, you’ll have something like 40-44 schools in the P2 conferences (today, it’s 34 schools, add ND, and add the top 6-7 schools that leave the ACC in 2031 = 42 schools).

    The media partners will then be faced with a big decision of the P2 conference media deals, and the CFB Playoff deal.  The issue will be:  do we close off the P2 with 42-44 schools?  Or, do we invite a few additional castoffs from the B12 and call it a 48-school P2 structure?  
     
    Campbell is trying to get Tech to be one of those small handful of B12 schools that gets an invitation to the P2 in 2031, should any B12 schools get invited at all.  I imagine the P2 will wind-up at 48 schools, so that leaves 5-6 schools openings, but the B12 schools will also be competing with those non-top 6 ACC schools that haven’t already been invited into the P2 (FSU, Clemson, UNC, Miami, UVA, et al).  
     
    Here is where things can get dicey.  Disney / ESPN already exclusively own the rights for the SEC and ACC schools.  They are likely to be the media partner that gets first dibs on the top ACC schools, since Disney controls their rights until 2036.  That means as the SEC expands to add top ACC schools, it’s likely to be adding schools that make sense for its geographic and demographic viewership.  That means the southeast U.S. and into the mid-Atlantic region.  More importantly, it does NOT extend to the western or midwestern U.S.

    That means FOX will be the media entity selecting the final 5-6 refugee schools from among the B12 and any ACC leftovers that SEC (Disney) doesn’t want.  How will FOX approach this decision?  Well, they have already invested in the west coast (USC, UCLA, UW, Oregon), but do they want to add a few schools to form a 6-8 school division?  Say, Arizona State and a Bay Area team (Cal or Stanford)?  What about adding some presence in the mountain states (Colorado, Utah)?  Or, does FOX want to buttress its presence in the mid-Atlantic media markets (Eastern time zone) to offset SEC encroachment?  Maybe WVU or UVA or VT?

    It doesn’t take too long to figure out that the B12 schools in the central / plains aren’t going to be the top choices here.  KU, ISU, KSU, Baylor, Tech, Okie State, etc.  There simply isn’t any incremental media revenue to be additive to a media rights deal by including these schools.  The Big Ten already owns the corn belt (Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana), so doubling down with ISU / KSU / KU / OSU makes little sense.

    I would say this to Campbell’s idea that growing the pie solves his problem:  Just  because the pie gets bigger, doesn’t mean your slice of it will too.   It’s still a competitive feeding situation, not just a bigger trough.

    A quick look at B12 football viewership plummeting in the last season (sans Texas and OU) tells you all you need to know about the individual value and viability of most of the current B12 schools.  And Campbell shouldn’t expect the executives at Disney and FOX to be too dumb to realize this as well.

     

    That’s a great breakdown. It demonstrates how college sports are controlled by the media outlets. I wish it was the other way around but the NCAA is a joke and the money is way too good to pass up. 
     

    I see a split of the “power 2 or 3” from the rest of college football. You outlined that well. 
    I don’t like where that is going but that is the reality as of now. Schools like Tech are fighting to get into that upper echelon and many will get left behind.  

    2 hours ago, Bobby Burton said:

    1. Campbell may be many things, but he’s not a hack. His only goal may even well be getting Texas Tech on an even playing field with Texas. I can’t discern his true goals, etc. But I can decidedly tell you he’s not a hack. The conversation we had was informative. He knew numbers, reasons, etc., and it wasn’t the sound of a hack.

    2. I too worry about Texas after Eltife. It’s the chief reason why I asked Governor Abbott about how he elects/chooses the BoR.

    If you show me someone affiliated with Tech athletics who isn't a hack that would be the first.  And I don't think he's the first.

    1 minute ago, General Grant said:

    If you show me someone affiliated with Tech athletics who isn't a hack that would be the first.  And I don't think he's the first.

    I believe Bobby showed you . Writing him off just because he played for Tech is the easy way out. Argue against his ideas, and prove he is wrong. I don’t agree with him across the board but he has some good points.

    • Hook 'Em 2
    • Haha 1
    10 minutes ago, Hashtag said:

    You are missing the point on why level playing field isn’t advantageous to Texas in the current landscape. If you can’t see why Texas has a clear advantage here then you’re just dumb. This isn’t just about Tech, this advantage also extends over Oklahoma, Alabama, LSU, etc. 

    I see your point and understand the advantage, but I understand something you don't...UT doesn't need another advantage to win.  I'm not afraid of Tech or any other school, a level playing field is what makes it enjoyable when Texas does win.   What's dumb is thinking the only way to win is having an advantage and hating a random school that could (but actually can't) negate your advantage..

    Curious...do you hate OSU or USC as much as Tech because they aren't short on NIL cash.   

    1 minute ago, Stuey22 said:

    I see your point and understand the advantage, but I understand something you don't...UT doesn't need another advantage to win.  I'm not afraid of Tech or any other school, a level playing field is what makes it enjoyable when Texas does win.   What's dumb is thinking the only way to win is having an advantage and hating a random school that could (but actually can't) negate your advantage..

    Curious...do you hate OSU or USC as much as Tech because they aren't short on NIL cash.   

    You’re still missing the point. When all the things that give Texas advantages right now are even then the schools I mentioned result to other methods to get an advantage that Texas does not. 

    Edited by Hashtag
    Just now, Hashtag said:

    Their entire behavior over the last 3 years from Campbell, to their AD, to their president, to their fans at games etc. 

    So just the last three years. Gotcha. Are their fans any worse than what you find in Baton Rouge, Collie Station, Columbus, Ann Arbor, State College? I’m sure you have loads of first hand experience to share. 

    • Haha 1
    17 minutes ago, General Grant said:

    If you show me someone affiliated with Tech athletics who isn't a hack that would be the first.  And I don't think he's the first.

    Zach Thomas, Wes Welker, Crabtree, Mahomes, Spike Dykes, Marsha Sharp, Grant McCasland and my favorite...Mike Leach the greatest pirate to ever sail west Texas. 

    • Hook 'Em 2
    5 minutes ago, Oldest Horn said:

    How so? Please elaborate. And do speak from first hand experience. 

    I’m not researching for you. If you don’t think they treated Texas teams, players, and even admin level differently due to bitterness then you’re a moron. Tons of articles and info out there about those experiences. 

    Just now, Hashtag said:

    I’m not researching for you. If you don’t think they treated Texas teams, players, and even admin level differently due to bitterness then you’re a moron. Tons of articles and info out there about those experiences. 

    If you have to research it you have no clue. Thanks for playing, ace. 

    9 minutes ago, Hashtag said:

    You’re still missing the point. When all the things that give Texas advantages right now are even then the schools I mentioned result to other methods to get an advantage that Texas does not. 

    LOL...I get your point, it's not a complicated concept.  I just don't agree.   

    5 minutes ago, Hashtag said:

    I’m not researching for you. If you don’t think they treated Texas teams, players, and even admin level differently due to bitterness then you’re a moron. Tons of articles and info out there about those experiences. 

    I was in Lubbock for the last game...don't think Bijan has fumbled since and no one was rude to me or my daughter, everyone was very nice, just sad and upset that rivalry is over....for now  




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

    Guest
    Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.