Realignment has changed college sports. That's left basketball to adjust 
		in a football-driven world 
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			 [November 04, 2024]  
			By AARON BEARD 
		
			Pittsburgh coach Jeff Capel recalls coaching in the Big 12 when 
			Texas flirted with heading to what was then the Pac-10, a move that 
			threatened to tear the Big 12 apart and potentially leave Kansas 
			homeless despite being a basketball blueblood. 
			 
			The Longhorns stayed put for another 13 years, but it foreshadowed 
			the chaos to come in college sports — and football's overwhelming 
			role in it. 
			 
			Now there are just four power conferences. Two – the Atlantic Coast 
			Conference and Big Ten -- have shore-to-shore footprints requiring 
			cross-country travel after the realignment scramble for TV money. It 
			centers on football as the financial engine powering every other 
			sport on campuses across the country. 
			 
			Men’s basketball's influence has been reduced to a backseat role as 
			it opens the season Monday, even with its own lucrative TV contract 
			for the March Madness tournament and its hypnotic effect on the 
			country every spring. 
			 
			“I think we are an afterthought right now,” said Capel, who was 
			Oklahoma's coach as Texas mulled the domino-tipping shift in 2010 
			before both schools ended up in the Southeastern Conference this 
			year. “We’re not at the forefront of what’s thought about with 
			what’s best for college athletics. Everything is about football 
			because everything’s about money.” 
			 
			Capel isn’t being critical so much as stating reality. The millions 
			of dollars generated by conference TV deals and distributed to 
			member schools comes primarily from football, which in turn is the 
			lifeblood for other sports. And that has spurred the speed-dating 
			pairings between leagues and schools seeking long-term stability. 
			 
			“If you look at the professional level, there’s the NFL and 
			everybody else, with the NBA being second but nowhere near in terms 
			of revenue and popularity,” said Columbia University lecturer Joe 
			Favorito, a sports and entertainment marketing consultant. “The NFL, 
			it’s America’s sport. That’s what football is.” 
			 
			A call to ‘modernize’ 
			Basketball, on both the men's and women's side, has been forced to 
			adapt like the rest of nonrevenue and Olympic sports programs 
			despite its high visibility. 
			 
			“If you’re not worried a little bit in this day and age about your 
			standing or how you make sure you can get an edge, then something’s 
			wrong," Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. "We have to modernize our game. 
			We have to make it appealing. We have to make it exciting beyond 
			just March and different points of the year. That’s something 
			college football is doing a great job with. They just have, and we 
			have to do a better job.” 
			 
			Challenges are growing. So too are the expenses driving the money 
			chase. 
			 
			The NCAA cleared the way in 2021 for athletes to profit from their 
			athletic fame through name, image and likeness (NIL) deals. That 
			opened the door for booster-funded collectives to offer payments 
			that many college sports leaders viewed as pay-for-play or 
			recruiting inducements under the guise of endorsements. 
			 
			There's also the pending $2.8 billion legal settlement that will 
			transform college sports by allowing schools to pay players. If 
			finalized, it would allow the biggest schools to share up to $22 
			million annually with their athletes, an easier-to-reach figure for 
			schools with significant football revenue compared to 
			basketball-centric leagues and schools. 
			 
			Basketball teams already travel more while playing more games in 
			longer seasons than football's tidy one-game-per-week rhythm. Now 
			those trips are more of a burden. That includes the Big 12 spanning 
			four time zones and the ACC adopting a scheduling model with the 
			additions of Stanford, California and SMU that sends some teams on 
			cross-country trips nearly a week at a time. 
		
			
			  
		
			“Sometimes we want to be stuck in our ways, but we’re not going to 
			be able to be stuck in our ways,” Michigan State Hall of Fame coach 
			Tom Izzo said as his Spartans prepare for the Big Ten’s additions of 
			UCLA, USC, Oregon and Washington. “So I’m going to embrace that 
			part. It doesn’t mean I have to love the fact of traveling from L.A. 
			to here and getting here at 6 in the morning and getting guys to 
			class and getting the team ready for the next game. But other people 
			have to do the same thing." 
			 
			Izzo added: “I just get a kick out of everybody that gets mad at 
			football. I never, ever get mad at football because I think they 
			play such a significant part in our athletic department." 
			 
			Tax documents for the power conferences highlight Izzo's point. 
			 
			It starts with the Big Ten generating $879.9 million and paying out 
			an average of $60.3 million per school for the 2022-23 school year, 
			followed by the SEC ($852.6 million, $51.3 million). The ACC was 
			next by generating $706.6 million in revenue and distributing $44.8 
			million to its football-playing members, followed by the Big 12 
			($510.7 million, $44.2 million) and finally the Pac-12 ($603.9 
			million, $33.6 million). 
			 
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            Duke head coach Jon Scheyer, right, argues a call with official Bert 
			Smith, left, during the first half of an NCAA college basketball 
			charity exhibition game against Arizona State in Durham, N.C., 
			Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben McKeown) 
              
 
			 By comparison, none of those leagues generated even 
			$250 million in revenue or distributed even $21 million per school 
			for the 2009-10 season when Texas considered its westward 
			partnership. And those figures don't reflect this year’s realignment 
			impact — which left the Pac-12 left in tatters and working to 
			rebuild itself — nor bigger future payouts from the expanded 
			playoff. 
			 
			Yet as Favorito noted: “You’re not really making money. You’re just 
			bringing in more money to spend. There’s a big difference between 
			the two.” 
			 
			What's next for basketball 
			 
			For basketball, the question becomes how to maintain its own 
			standing. 
			 
			Capel supports expanding the NCAA tournaments beyond their 68-team 
			format. He points to the top tier of Division I football breaking 
			away into the Bowl Subdivision, above the former I-AA level now 
			known as the Championship Subdivision, en route to the eventual CFP 
			launch at four teams for 2014 and now 12 teams this year. 
			 
			“They've expanded because they realize there's more money to be made 
			with that,” Capel said. “Why don't we do that? Like, who's thinking 
			about basketball?" 
			 
			The basketball question could be of particular importance for the 
			futures of the Big 12 and ACC. 
			 
			The Big 12 lost its top football brands with the Longhorns and 
			Sooners, and expanded to absorb Pac-12 remnants Arizona, Arizona 
			State, Colorado and Utah — schools that do more to enhance an 
			already-rugged basketball league than boost football. 
			
			
			  
			“Listen, I’ve discussed it before and since I’ve been here, I do 
			think basketball is undervalued," commissioner Brett Yormark said. 
			“I think there is real upside. I think there’s potential growth to 
			further monetize it, both short-term and long-term.” 
			 
			He noted that women's basketball is also a key part of the mix: "You 
			see those WNBA numbers – record ratings. You saw that last year in 
			our tournament, the NCAA Tournament. I think there is real upside 
			and I’m looking to capture as much of that both short-term and 
			long-term as I can.” 
			 
			The ACC is in slightly different position by still having national 
			football brands Florida State, Clemson and Miami to pair with a 
			tradition-rich basketball league featuring bluebloods Duke and North 
			Carolina. But the league is locked in a legal fight with FSU and 
			Clemson after those schools filed lawsuits challenging the league’s 
			ability to charge hundreds of millions of dollars for leaving the 
			conference. 
			 
			The league's new incentive model allowing teams to keep more of the 
			money generated by their own postseason success illustrates 
			football's top-dog status: a team that hits every marker for the 
			2024-25 sports season could earn around $25 million more in league 
			payouts, though $20 million rides on winning the College Football 
			Playoff. 
			 
			ACC commissioner Jim Phillips has highlighted increased efforts to 
			boost basketball in the past year, even while acknowledging the 
			reality of a football-first model. 
			 
			“Basketball's never been more important for us than it is now,” 
			Phillips said. "I would say certainly we all understand the 
			importance of football. But football’s shadow is probably larger 
			than it should be. We understand fully the economic engine that 
			football is. But basketball and the season and the tournament, if 
			you look at the numbers and those types of things, it’s healthy, 
			it’s a healthy sport within college sports. 
			 
			“I think for all of us that are leading conferences or leading 
			schools," Phillips added, “basketball has to be a priority.” 
			___ 
			 
			AP Basketball Writer Dave Skretta and AP Sports Writer Larry Lage 
			contributed to this report. 
			
			
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