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He said Oklahoma was willing to share revenue from the conference's two television packages equally among all members, resulting in a net loss for the Sooners, "in order to strengthen the conference" as long as it was phased in over time.
The Big 12 splits revenue from its Fox Sports contract evenly, but only half of the money from its top-tier deal with ABC goes into equal shares. The rest is weighted toward the programs that play on the network more frequently.
He said the grant-in-rights proposal would keep schools from being tempted to "elope" with another league.
"They would have taken us as a member, having to feed us as another mouth to feed, but they wouldn't be earning any money from us at all because the money would still be going to the Big 12," Boren said. "Now, do you think that would encourage a conference to give you an invitation? No. ...
"It's much stronger than, `Oh, we'll pay an $18 million break-up fee and we'll be gone.'"
Texas Tech President Guy Bailey agreed that granting the TV rights was essential.
"Not everybody in the past has been willing to do that," he said.
After the Pac-12 slammed the door on any hopes for Big 12 schools to move west, the 54-year-old Beebe became an easy target for schools upset about instability in the league.
"I have no negative personal feelings toward our previous commissioner, but I'm alarmed by the fact that in 15 months we lost three teams and I'm aware in detail how some of those situations played out," Boren said. "I don't feel it was inevitable that we lost those three teams."
Despite that sentiment now, Beebe had been rewarded in November with a three-year extension on his contract through 2015.
"It is satisfying to know the Big 12 Conference will survive, and I congratulate the members for taking strong action to ensure a bright future as a premier intercollegiate athletics conference," Beebe said in a statement released by the league.
His temporary replacement, Neinas, is familiar with helping schools fill open jobs and now will find himself in charge of a league seeking new members.
Boren said he'd be delighted if Texas A&M remained as the Big 12's 10th member but "it's highly likely that they will go to the SEC."
"They're so far down the line, I think, with the SEC that I don't think they are likely to change their mind," Boren said, adding that the other nine members did nothing to remove the threat of legal action that has kept A&M's departure from being finalized.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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