Colorado Board Approves Return to Big 12

The University of Colorado will depart from the Pac-12 for the Big 12 after the 2023-24 season, as the school formalized its future membership in the Big 12 on Thursday.

The school’s board of regents voted unanimously to make the transition, which was the final step in a process that for the past 24 hours has largely been considered a formality. Colorado’s departure will coincide with the end of the Pac-12 television deal, which expires after the 2023-24 season, meaning Colorado will not be on the hook for any exit fee. Colorado is expected to join the Big 12 at a prorated basis, which is an average of $31.7 million in television revenue over the course of the league’s new contract starting in 2025.

“The time has come for us to change conferences,” Colorado president Todd Saliman told the board of regents Thursday afternoon. “We see this as a way to create more opportunity for the University of Colorado, for our students and our student-athletes and create a path forward for us in the future.”

Colorado’s application for membership is the latest in a series of blows to the Pac-12, which loses their two cornerstone programs, the USC Trojans and UCLA Bruins to the Big Ten in 2024 and is in the middle of a contracted process of landing a new television deal. Pac-12 leadership is expected to meet with presidents Thursday night to discuss that conferences next steps, sources told ESPN. The Buffalos had emerged as the loudest critics of Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff’s ability to facilitate a reasonable television deal. School officials from Colorado met in person with Big 12 officials at a neutral site in early May, per ESPN sources.

For the Buffalos, the move marks a return to the Big 12, where they were members for 14 years, from 1996 to 2010. Colorado left for the Pac-12 in 2011 and has had very little success and no bowl wins and just two winning football seasons since the move. Colorado is coming off a putrid 1-11 season, and new coach Deion Sanders will coach just one season in the Pac-12.

Since the announcement last summer of the upcoming departure of USC and UCLA to the Big Ten, the Pac-12 has struggled mightily to secure a lucrative television deal to keep its members happy. The immediate expectation is that the Pac-12 would replace Colorado with San Diego State Aztecs, an addition that was being discussed internally in the Pac-12 even before Colorado’s departure.

It is uncertain whether this will create a domino effect of movement from the Pac-12, as Colorado’s application is the most boisterous manifestation of the impatience. At a forum in Washington, D.C., recently, Arizona Wildcats president Bobby Robbins indicated that the league’s presidents were going to wait to see the finances of the Pac-12 television deal.

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“Right now, I think all 10 of us are solely focused on the deal,” Robbins said June 7. “Once we have that, we have degrees of freedom to make informed decisions.”

The acceptance of Colorado marks a changing of the guard for the Big 12, as the first major-conference school added since the league began play in 1996. The Big 12 added West Virginia (Big East) and TCU (Mountain West) in 2012. In the wake of the departure of Oklahoma and Texas, which will start play in the SEC next year, the Big 12 has added Cincinnati (AAC), UCF (AAC), BYU (independent) and Houston (AAC) for the upcoming season.

The attractiveness of the Big 12 to entice Colorado’s return can be directly attributed to the television deal brokered by new Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark, a deal that was announced in October 2022. This summer, Yormark opened negotiations with Fox and ESPN, respectively, to discuss the Big 12’s contract a year early, as the Pac-12’s deal was set to expire after the 2023-24 season, a year earlier than the Big 12’s deal.

That helped the Big 12 jump in line and land a pair of linear television partners, which left the Pac-12 with fewer options and television windows.

The departure of Colorado will sound the alarm through the Pac-12, a league already influenced by the uncertainty of the television deal. There’s been little said publicly by the Pac-12’s two dominant remaining programs, Oregon and Washington, as the league waits to see how Kliavkoff can navigate a television deal in what is considered a bear market.

The potential for San Diego State to join the Pac-12 was revealed publicly recently. ESPN reported that the school’s president had sent a letter to the Mountain West Conference about the school’s intention to depart the league. In that letter, the school asked for a one-month extension “given unforeseen delays involving other collegiate athletic conferences beyond our control.”

That was in reference to the Pac-12’s television deal, which has come together slowly, but surely. Although San Diego State and the Mountain West disagree on whether the school has issued its formal resignation from the league, the school’s declaration of departure before June 30 means an exit fee that is nearly $16.5 million to leave after the 2023-24 season as opposed to nearly double that at $34 million after that date.

“These decisions are never easy, and we’ve valued our 12 years as proud members of the Pac-12 Conference,” Colorado chancellor Philip DiStefano and athletic director Rick George said in a joint statement. “We look forward to achieving new goals while embarking on this exciting next era as members of the Big 12 Conference.”

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