In short, Iowa will be making somewhere between 70-80 million more PER YEAR than Iowa State for the next 8 years just for simply being affiliated with the Big Ten.
Big 12 TV deal will pay between 31-32 million per year to each school. Big Ten TV deal will pay close to 100 million. Then if you add in the 20-30 million each conference will get from the college football playoff and March Madness, ISU will be about $50 million annually from the Big 12 and Iowa will be about $125 million annually from the Big Ten.
Sports Business Journal reported Sunday that the Big 12 has reached deals with ESPN and Fox Sports on a six-year agreement worth $2.28 billion, which works out to $380 million annually — or about $31.7 million for each of the 12 schools — starting in 2025-26.
Last year, the conference delivered a record $43 million in revenue to each school, which includes media rights, College Football Playoff, NCAA Tournament and other payouts. With the new media-rights deal and the expected expansion of the CFP to 12 teams, the per school distribution could approach $50 million in the next few years.
Per the Action Network, Big Ten schools will receive the same distribution in 2023-24 as it will this year, roughly $60 million per school. The payout will increase slightly in the second year of the deal before it jumps to roughly $100 million per school, annually, starting in 2025. That's based purely on the media deal and does not include revenue from making the College Football Playoff, bowl games or NCAA Tournament.
Big 12 TV deal will pay between 31-32 million per year to each school. Big Ten TV deal will pay close to 100 million. Then if you add in the 20-30 million each conference will get from the college football playoff and March Madness, ISU will be about $50 million annually from the Big 12 and Iowa will be about $125 million annually from the Big Ten.
Sports Business Journal reported Sunday that the Big 12 has reached deals with ESPN and Fox Sports on a six-year agreement worth $2.28 billion, which works out to $380 million annually — or about $31.7 million for each of the 12 schools — starting in 2025-26.
Last year, the conference delivered a record $43 million in revenue to each school, which includes media rights, College Football Playoff, NCAA Tournament and other payouts. With the new media-rights deal and the expected expansion of the CFP to 12 teams, the per school distribution could approach $50 million in the next few years.
Per the Action Network, Big Ten schools will receive the same distribution in 2023-24 as it will this year, roughly $60 million per school. The payout will increase slightly in the second year of the deal before it jumps to roughly $100 million per school, annually, starting in 2025. That's based purely on the media deal and does not include revenue from making the College Football Playoff, bowl games or NCAA Tournament.