THIS IS VERY RELEVANT TO FURMAN AND SOCON BASKETBALL (and all sports).
Article by Associated Press, Ralph D. Russo, published today in The State.
March Madness has been a bonanza for the OVC. The league placed 2 teams in the NCAA tournament for the first time in 32 years. Both teams lost their second tournament game. But the big payoff for the conference's 12 schools comes over the next 6 years, a windfall of at least $6.77 million that starts in 2020 with a $1.1 million payment from the NCAA.
Every year, millions are distributed to 32 D-I conferences by the NCAA based on what teams get into the tournament and how far they advance. Last year it was $216 million.
In recent years, the portion going to the 5 most powerful conferences has increased, according to an AP analysis of more than $3 billion distributed from 1997-2018.
For leagues outside the wealthiest, an upset or elusive at-large bid is like winning the lottery.
Already at a huge disadvantage, it is becoming harder for teams in smaller conferences to keep up. Windfalls like the one heading toward the OVC have become even more important to mid-major hoops.
It points to a long-term problem for mid-majors trying to compete as power conferences stockpile wins and at-large invites. It takes revenue to build a program that can compete with the big boys. For those with less, it is becoming harder. It is a vicious cycle.
From 1997-2018, the Big Ten has been paid the most at $340 million, while the SWAC has earned $25 million, nearly the minimum it can earn given that all leagues make money from their teams that qualify automatically.
Since massive realignment among college conferences in 2012-2014, Power Five schools have earned even more under the system of "units", the term used by the NCAA to tally the payouts.
How it works:
Each distribution year is assigned a value for a single unit, which is them applied to bids and most wins earned by conferences over the previous six tournaments.
The Power Five conferences earned 47.5% of NCAA Tournament units from 2002-13. From 2014-18, those same conferences - which also rake in billions from media rights deals, conference networks and postseason football - earned 55.3% of NCAA Tournament units.
With a 12-year, $500 million television contract, and no major college football to support, the Big East is in much better shape than all other conferences outside the Power Five (ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12).
Units earned by the 26 other D-I conferences have fallen from 39.4% from 2002-13 to 36.4% since. The decline tracks with a falling number of at-large bids going to conferences outside the Power Five and Big East.
It's discouraging because the challenges are increasing on a year-to-year basis. The gap in resources between the high majors and everyone else is accelerating at an alarming rate.
The NCAA began its current system in 1991.
Article by Associated Press, Ralph D. Russo, published today in The State.
March Madness has been a bonanza for the OVC. The league placed 2 teams in the NCAA tournament for the first time in 32 years. Both teams lost their second tournament game. But the big payoff for the conference's 12 schools comes over the next 6 years, a windfall of at least $6.77 million that starts in 2020 with a $1.1 million payment from the NCAA.
Every year, millions are distributed to 32 D-I conferences by the NCAA based on what teams get into the tournament and how far they advance. Last year it was $216 million.
In recent years, the portion going to the 5 most powerful conferences has increased, according to an AP analysis of more than $3 billion distributed from 1997-2018.
For leagues outside the wealthiest, an upset or elusive at-large bid is like winning the lottery.
Already at a huge disadvantage, it is becoming harder for teams in smaller conferences to keep up. Windfalls like the one heading toward the OVC have become even more important to mid-major hoops.
It points to a long-term problem for mid-majors trying to compete as power conferences stockpile wins and at-large invites. It takes revenue to build a program that can compete with the big boys. For those with less, it is becoming harder. It is a vicious cycle.
From 1997-2018, the Big Ten has been paid the most at $340 million, while the SWAC has earned $25 million, nearly the minimum it can earn given that all leagues make money from their teams that qualify automatically.
Since massive realignment among college conferences in 2012-2014, Power Five schools have earned even more under the system of "units", the term used by the NCAA to tally the payouts.
How it works:
Each distribution year is assigned a value for a single unit, which is them applied to bids and most wins earned by conferences over the previous six tournaments.
The Power Five conferences earned 47.5% of NCAA Tournament units from 2002-13. From 2014-18, those same conferences - which also rake in billions from media rights deals, conference networks and postseason football - earned 55.3% of NCAA Tournament units.
With a 12-year, $500 million television contract, and no major college football to support, the Big East is in much better shape than all other conferences outside the Power Five (ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12).
Units earned by the 26 other D-I conferences have fallen from 39.4% from 2002-13 to 36.4% since. The decline tracks with a falling number of at-large bids going to conferences outside the Power Five and Big East.
It's discouraging because the challenges are increasing on a year-to-year basis. The gap in resources between the high majors and everyone else is accelerating at an alarming rate.
The NCAA began its current system in 1991.