USC’s reasons for leaving the Conference of Champions aren’t complicated

TrojansWire.com editor Matt Zemek says USC had a hundred million reasons for leaving the conference.

So after a century of history and tradition and a lot of domination on the gridiron, why would USC suddenly decide to leave the Pac-12 for the Big Ten?

This decision seemingly came out of left field and to make it worse, the Trojans and Bruins pretty much were holding hands and walking into the sunset that was the Pac-12. The two biggest schools took their ball and the biggest market on the West Coast for greener pastures. Now the other schools, including Oregon, are left scrambling.

It’s couldn’t have been just about the money, right? We went to USC insider and friend of the site, editor of TrojansWire.com Matt Zemek, for some answers. According to him, this wasn’t all that complicated.

It’s money.

UCLA in particular was drowning in debt. USC wasn’t in debt, but the Trojans stood to make tens of millions more dollars in the Big Ten. If any school president is offered several tens of millions of dollars each year, is that president going to say no? USC and UCLA are going to get a full share of Big Ten revenue. They stand to make at or above $100 million per year under a TV deal currently estimated to be worth $1.143 billion according to recent reporting from Pac-12 journalists and their sources within the media industry. USC was not going to turn that down.

Zemek also said that our old “friend” and former Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott was so bad at his job at negotiating the conference’s media deal that that those chickens are coming home to roost in the seeming demise of the Pac-12.

Larry Scott simply devalued the Pac-12 so much that USC didn’t have much of a choice. Scott also failed to tether the Pac-12 to ESPN when he had a chance in 2018. If he had done that, USC and UCLA would still be in the Pac-12.

Bottom line: it came down to the Benjamins and USC and UCLA just hit the lottery with the Big Ten. The Los Angeles schools had a choice of walking away from the cash or the conference. They made the smart move and took the money.

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Larry Scott goes out of his way to insult Oregon, Pac-12 as a whole

The soon-to-be former commissioner Larry Scott didn’t hide his true feelings on his way out the door.

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Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott will be FORMER Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott in three weeks. But he can pack up his office right now.

In an interview with Ralph Russo of the Associated Press, Scott was disappointed with the “lack” of success of the conference’s traditional powers in football.

I’m sure looking back we could probably identify some small things we would have done differently, but all the strategies around football and other sports were in alignment with all of our schools and our football coaches. USC, Oregon, Stanford, Washington not getting to the playoffs more often or winning has very little to do with the conference office. Between compliance issues, coaching changes and other things, some of our traditional powerhouses have struggled the last few years, and that’s hurt the league overall.

This is DucksWire, so his comments on USC, Stanford, and Washington can just sit there and marinate for those programs. But to lump the Oregon Ducks athletic program in there is just not factual.

Scott must suffer from some kind of memory loss. He also fails to remember the Ducks’ success across the board since he was hired in 2009. Oregon has been to and won three of its four trips to Pasadena. The Ducks also won a College Football semifinal. That game also featured Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota.

Oregon has been the kings and queens of the hardwood by going to the NCAA tournament on almost an annual basis and both teams represented the Pac-12 in the Final Four. The Stanford women just won the national championship. Scott might have also forgotten the Ducks featured the new face of women’s basketball in Sabrina Ionescu. So Oregon did its part to make sure the Pac-12 had plenty of exposure.

Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports

But Scott himself made exposure an issue with his poor TV deals with ESPN and Fox Sports 1. The Pac-12 After Dark never should have been a thing. After dark means, no one on the East Coast is watching.

Scott did form the Pac-12 Network, which on paper was good. But his lack of reaching a deal with DirecTV to carry the network was disastrous. The conference spent millions of dollars to form a network and its regional affiliates and no one watched.

The Pac-12 Network’s main carrier is Comcast, but even then, some of the regionals are not shown in high definition, eve in 2021. That’s hard to fathom. Just to help the bottom line, the network could have offered a subscription-based service like MLB.TV. But Scott’s lack of vision didn’t allow that to occur.

Overall, Scott’s tenure was tumultuous, to say the least. But to go after the member schools and their supposed lack of success without mentioning his failures is particularly galling. Scott’s tone-deafness should fall on deaf ears on the West Coast.

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Former Vols’ offensive coordinator Larry Scott debuts as Howard’s head coach

Larry Scott debuted as Howard’s head coach Saturday.

Larry Scott debuted as Howard’s head coach Saturday.

Howard lost to Delaware State, 17-10, in its season opener during the 2021 spring season. Howard did not play in the fall due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Scott enters his first head coaching position following seven seasons as an assistant at Power Five schools: Miami (2013-15, tight ends and interim head coach), Tennessee (2016-17, tight ends and offensive coordinator) and Florida (2018-19, tight ends).

Howard led the contest, 3-2, heading into the fourth quarter. Delaware State would outscore the Bison, 15-7, in the final quarter of play.

Part of Delaware State’s fourth quarter scoring included a 41-yard interception by Esaias Guthrie with 2:06 remaining.

Howard will return to action March 6 against South Carolina State.

Tennessee offensive coordinator Larry Scott. Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire.

Scott previously joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” to discuss his career and becoming Howard’s head coach.

The entire show with Scott can be listened to here or below.

Delaware State University’s Daniel Douglas (11) tackles Howard University’s Amir Lewis (44) in the Hornets’ 17-10 win in their season and home opener Saturday, Feb. 27, 2021. © Jason Minto via Imagn Content Services, LLC

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Report: Ohio State AD Gene Smith has not been contacted by Pac-12

According to a report from the Columbus Dispatch, Ohio State AD Gene Smith has not been contacted about the open Pac-12 commissioner job.

Shortly after the news broke that the Pac-12 was parting ways with commissioner Larry Scott, names began to circulate about a potential replacement. One of the most prominent names that came up from multiple people was Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith.

Smith has ties to the Pac-12 as the former AD of Arizona State, has been very visible serving on several committees within the NCAA, and leads one of the largest revenue-generating athletic departments in the country. In other words, the marriage would make some sense at least.

However, according to a report from the Columbus Dispatch (subscription may be required), Smith has not been approached by anyone from the Pac-12.

“Honored to be mentioned,” Smith wrote in a text message to The Dispatch, “but I have not been contacted by anyone.” He went on to say that the mentioning of his name was “pure speculation” at this point.

Scott’s tenure on the left coast has been marked by an inability to generate revenue and television deals like some of his other Power Five colleagues. The power and landscape has shifted the most in the biggest revenue sport, college football, and the Pac-12 has struggled to keep up. Because of that and other reasons, the conference’s CEO group voted to end his contract a year early. He will go through June with the league looking for a replacement.

Ryan Day was asked by reporters last week if he has had any conversations about his name coming up and wasn’t shy about his feelings for his boss when he said that he had not.

“I haven’t talked to him about any of that stuff,” Day said, “but if anything like that ever happened, certainly that would not be good. His leadership has been unwavering this past year and probably some of his best work, I would think. Not trying to speak out of school, but he’s done a tremendous job.”

We must note that despite Smith confirming that he has not been contacted, he did not make a point to make a comment on what would happen if he was tapped on the shoulder for interest.

We’ll obviously stay on top of anything that comes further from his name coming up, but at this point, it sounds like there’s still plenty of homework for the Pac-12 to perform.

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REPORT: Alabama AD Greg Byrne being considered for Pac-12 Commissioner position

Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne has only been with the Crimson tide for a few years, but is apparently now being considered for…

News recently broke of Larry Scott, the Pac-12 commissioner, planning on stepping down from the role by the end of June. With the announcement, conference officials have already begun their search.

Adam Rittenberg of ESPN took to Twitter to report some of the names he has already heard from sources. All of the names mentioned are athletic directors from across the country, one of which being Alabama’s athletic director, Greg Byrne.

Byrne has ties out West. He was born in Idaho, graduated from Arizona State, worked in administrative roles at both Oregon and Oregon State and was the athletic diretor at Arizona prior to accepting his current role in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Byrne has been at Alabama for almost four years and has made hires such as baseball coach Brad Bohannon and head basketball coach Nate Oats.

No official word on his candidacy for the position has been made public, nor has he publicly stated anything regarding the potential opportunity.

Roll Tide Wire will publish any information made available.

Pac-12 to implement daily COVID-19 testing that ‘is a major step toward the safe return of sport competition’

Yesterday the Pac-12 conference announced that it has entered an agreement with healthcare manufacturer Quidel “to implement…

Yesterday the Pac-12 conference announced that it has entered an agreement with healthcare manufacturer Quidel “to implement up to daily testing for COVID-19 with student-athletes across all of its campuses for all close-contact sports.”

Constant and rapid testing being one of the main roadblocks towards the Big Ten and Pac-12 returning to play football, this news is massive for each conference’s return to sports and other athletic activity.

Big picture this situation also allows businesses, schools and more to see what happens when testing like this is done to a large asymptomatic group like a football team and then implement similar practices in their respective domains.

Everything about this sheds positive light on the path forward both in college athletics and in our country.

After the announcement yesterday Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott held a press conference and discussed what this breakthrough means for the conference and what the timeline towards playing looks like.

Here are some quotes that stuck out:

 

On the breakthrough being a major step towards playing:

 

On the overall importance:

 

Quidel president on what this “study” can do for the rest of the country:

 

A look forward at the timeline of when the conference will return to competition:

 

And, finally, Scott’s comment that the conference is trying to align their football season with the Big Ten:

 

Let’s focus on the last quote for a second and recognize the difference between the Big Ten and the Pac-12.

The Pac-12 found a testing breakthrough and held a press conference during which the commissioner was open, honest and clear about what it means and the path forward.

The Big Ten needed a lawsuit to force information out that there was indeed a vote between the presidents to postpone the season.

Notice the difference?

Anyway, the two conferences aligning their seasons makes sense at this point as it is looking increasingly unlikely that either will suit up this fall. It isn’t ideal, but a spring Rose Bowl game wouldn’t be the worst consolation prize.

Overall, though, this is tremendous news for the return of Big Ten and Pac-12 athletics as well as for our country as a whole. Maybe they still won’t play until the 2021 calendar year, but it’s clear they’re at least on the right track.

 

Stay tuned to BadgersWire as we follow everything surrounding the Big Ten’s plan and process towards returning to play football.

College football: what the state of the 2020 season looks like in each Power 5 conference

Here’s a look into what the 2020 college football season looks like across the Power 5 — for now.

It’s been quite the week for college football as two conferences within the Power 5 made the decision to pull the plug, while the three others made their plans to forge forward clear.

There are still a lot of questions to be answered as we move closer to the start date of the season, and there’s still a lot that can happen as we’ve seen over three days of what’s been a rapidly changing situation.

Here’s a look into what the 2020 college football season looks like across the Power 5 — for now.

Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC)

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

The ACC is pushing forward with the season, largely because the chair of its advisory group believes football can be played safely this year.

“We believe we can mitigate it down to a level that makes everyone safe,” Wolfe told Sports Business Daily. “Can we safely have two teams meet on the field? I would say yes. Will it be tough? Yes. Will it be expensive and hard and lots of work? For sure. But I do believe you can sufficiently mitigate the risk of bringing COVID onto the football field or into the training room at a level that’s no different than living as a student on campus.

The ACC is set to begin the season on Sept. 10. The current plan in place has teams playing 10 conference games, in addition to a non-conference contest.

Historic player organization movements are only the beginning

If a players union is ever going to exist at the college level, it will not come from the generosity of college athletics administrators.

Earlier this week, a group of Pac-12 players sent a letter to the Players’ Tribune with a list of demands for the conference and are threatening to opt-out of the 2020 football season should those demands not be met.

The list was later shared by a number of Pac-12 athletes on Twitter, including Oregon star Penei Sewell, who is a projected early first-round pick in the 2021 NFL Draft.

The players’ demands cover a wide range of issues, from COVID-19 safety to racial justice and compensation. For COVID-19 protections, players want the ability to opt-out of the season free from punishment within their programs and for safety standards to be maintained by a third party. To protect the status of all sports during the pandemic, they are demanding pay cuts from Commissioner Larry Scott, as well as coaches and administrators.

They also want the right to profit off their name, image and likeness, as well as the distribution of 50 percent of total conference revenue from each sport evenly among the athletes in those sports.

In response to this, players across the nation voiced their support for the movement, including Florida defensive end Zachary Carter.

Groups of players in both the Big 10 and Mountain West followed suit, giving their own list of demands to conference administrators. However, the lists of demands from those conferences aren’t as broad as that of the Pac-12 players. They only address COVID-19 safety and not wider-reaching social issues.

These movements have shown unprecedented levels of player organization at a time when it is desperately needed. As players unions in the NBA, MLB and NFL have negotiated substantive protections for their players, college athletes — who have no representation whatsoever — have been largely forced to go along with the (generally terrible) decisions made by those who allegedly care about their best interest.

Of course, the players have power; any group of organized laborers does. It’s the reason trade unions exist in the first place. But without a union (which the players desperately need for a number of reasons, as the Pac-12 players have demonstrated), the players are essentially powerless as individuals.

That’s why these grassroots organizational movements are so important. Once players realize they have power in numbers, they will be able to affect change within the system. Maybe not everything they are demanding, but significant change nonetheless.

If a players union is ever going to exist at the college level, it will not come from the generosity of college athletics administrators. Allowing the players, who aren’t technically employees, to unionize would give the game away for the NCAA. If players can collectively bargain, the current system of college athletics would be burned to the ground.

And it should be.

Because ultimately, the value of college sports isn’t derived from the NCAA. It comes from the players. And the only way the players will get what they deserve is if they force the issue through organized, collective action.

If met, the demands of the Pac-12 players would preclude the league from competing in NCAA-sanctioned events, as nearly all of them violate current amateurism rules. But, so what? Do the conferences really need the NCAA to survive?

Talking to ESPN, Ramogi Huma, founder of the college athletics advocacy group the National College Players Association, phrased the answer succinctly.

Huma said the players are aware that if the Pac-12 met their demands that the conference would not be eligible to participate in NCAA-sanctioned competitions or championships.

“Right now, it’s clear that the conferences don’t need the NCAA. Each conference is an industry unto itself,” Huma said. “[The players are saying,] ‘We’re fine if our conference doesn’t belong to the NCAA at all. We need to be treated fairly.'”

Don’t misunderstand, some reforms are certainly possible within the system, as state legislators allowing players to be compensated for the use of their names, images and likenesses shows.

But historically, massive, systemic reforms for labor groups tend to stem from one thing and one thing only: tireless and unflinching advocacy from the laborers themselves until those taking advantage of them have no choice remaining but to listen.

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Larry Scott, Pac-12 leaders offer to talk to #WeAreUnited athletes

A bombshell development.

Anyone who felt the Pac-12 athletes of #WeAreUnited had overplayed their hand or had bungled their initial statement need to step back and reconsider.

Per Ross Dellenger of Sports Illustrated, Larry Scott sent an e-mail Wednesday night to the #WeAreUnited group, proposing a Zoom call at 8 p.m. Pacific time on Thursday night to discuss the demands made by Pac-12 athletes.

One would certainly assume the athletes will accept the invitation and participate in the call. Dellenger reported the following as well:

“The proposed call would include Scott, ASU athletic director Ray Anderson, Utah athletic director Mark Harlan and Pac-12 assistant commissioner Chris Merino, the league’s liaison to student-athlete groups.”

A portion of Scott’s e-mail to the #WeAreUnited athletes contained the following notes:

“I wanted to share with you in advance of our call some background materials—including an announcement made by the NCAA Board of Governors earlier today (Wednesday)—that I believe are directly responsive to some of the topics and concerns that you have raised, and that will help inform our initial conversation.”

Dellenger wrote that Scott will offer more details on health and safety guidelines in the Thursday call, should it happen.

I recently talked to Arizona State offensive lineman Cody Shear, one of the media contacts for the #WeAreUnited group, about Sunday’s letter in the Players Tribune and what it means for this movement among Pac-12 athletes. I will post portions of the conversation I had with him on Thursday here at Trojans Wire. Without giving away too much of that interview — you will get direct quotes on Thursday in a series of posts — a central point Cody Shear wanted to make is that he and his fellow athletes wanted a place at the table, a chance to negotiate with the Pac-12 and the power brokers in college sports.

That is a central goal of #WeAreUnited, and I don’t think anyone can reasonably dispute that.

Assuming this call does happen Thursday night, the Pac-12 athletes will have already achieved a fundamental goal. One can only wonder how much the landscape of college sports will change in the months and years ahead.

Chase Williams to represent USC in negotiations with PAC-12

PAC-12 S-A’s sent a letter to Larry Scott outlining demands and calling for daily meetings. The letter was signed by USC’s Chase Williams.

USC Trojans defensive back Chase Williams was one of 11 PAC-12 football players who signed a letter sent to PAC-12 commissioner Larry Scott, seeking daily meetings (via Zoom) to discuss player safety, racial injustices and various other issues as detailed in their Pac-12 Unity Demands letter published on Sunday.

The letter was signed by one member of 11 out of the 12 teams in the conference, with Colorado being the only team not present.

From the letter:

We are requesting daily Zoom meetings with you, our Player Representative Team beginning on Monday, August 3rd at 8:00pm with Mr. Scott and our athletic directors until our demands are met. Please contact us at valpacunity@gmail.com to arrange the details.

The players discuss their primary reasons for opting out of the 2020 football season, including the lack of regard for player safety and health.

Scott responded, answering many of their questions in a letter himself, obtained by Sports Illustrated, although it felt rather empty.

It’s nice to see the PAC-12 student-athletes coming together for a cause, although this story is far from over and seems likely to have a big impact on the product on the field, if and when a college football season happens in 2020.

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