Sun Belt finishes first in non AQ BCS revenue:
Posted: Fri Jan 24, 2014 4:38 pm
Good news. And, it will be even better next year.
CBSSports.com obtained documents (seen here and here) detailing the revenue split among those four leagues -- Sun Belt, Conference USA, MAC and Mountain West.
The Sun Belt led those leagues, taking in almost $4 million in BCS revenue. However, the MAC went from potentially first among the non-automatic qualifying conferences to last among the four when it lost an undefeated Northern Illinois in the MAC championship game, then went 0-5 in bowl games.
Performance-based revenue totaling approximately $6 million was dividing by shares. By finishing first, the Sun Belt got four shares, the Mountain West got three, etc.
The take for those schools goes up significantly with the beginning of the College Football Playoff next season. The five power conferences (Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, Big 12, SEC) will split 71.5 percent of the approximately $400 million revenue in the first year of the playoff's 12-year deal.
The five non-AQ conferences -- the American Athletic Conference drops down after losing automatic status -- will split approximately $86.5 million in revenue from the new playoff poll. That's up from a maximum of $28 million in the BCS. The Sun Belt, for one, will see a 10-fold increase in revenue, from approximately $100,000 per team to $1 million.
Also beginning next season, the highest ranked of those 59 schools -- as decided by the selection committee -- will get an automatic berth in one of the four playoff bowls below the two national semifinals.
http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootbal ... ear-of-bcsThe revenue standings were kept by averaging the rank of each school in the six BCS computers. The Sun Belt was No. 1 with average team rank of 77.39. Its top team, Louisiana-Lafayette, averaged 52.5 in the computers. Co-champ Arkansas State finished at 55.66.
Arkansas State jumped from 73 in those average computer rankings after its GoDaddy Bowl win over Ball State. Louisiana-Lafayette went from 66thto 52.5after beating Tulane in the New Orleans Bowl.
The Sun Belt was consistent despite not having a team in the top five average computer ranking among the non-BCS conferences. However, the Sun Belt (with one) was the only non-AQ league without multiple teams with an average rank below 100 in the computers. Not bad for a conference that -- from 2004-2007 -- was dead last in average computer ranking.
It's been an impressive couple of years for Karl Benson. The Sun Belt commissioner held the same position in the WAC for 18 years, leaving for the Sun Belt in February 2012. The WAC finished first in non-BCS revenue distribution that year. The league disbanded in football after the 2012 season.
“I'm looking forward to the competitiveness of [the playoff era],” Benson said. “Whatever competitive gap there had been in the past is definitely lessened.”