Current:Home > NewsACC commissioner promises to fight ‘for as long as it takes’ amid legal battles with Clemson, FSU -TradeBridge
ACC commissioner promises to fight ‘for as long as it takes’ amid legal battles with Clemson, FSU
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:32:52
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Atlantic Coast Conference commissioner Jim Phillips said the league will fight “as long as it takes” in legal cases against Florida State and Clemson as those member schools challenge the league’s ability to charge hundreds of millions of dollars to leave the conference.
Speaking Monday to start the league’s football media days, Phillips called lawsuits filed by FSU and Clemson “extremely damaging, disruptive and harmful” to the league. Most notably, those schools are challenging the league’s grant-of-rights media agreement that gives the ACC control of media rights for any school that attempts to leave for the duration of a TV deal with ESPN running through 2036.
The league has also sued those schools to enforce the agreement in a legal dispute with no end in sight.
“I can say that we will fight to protect the ACC and our members for as long as it takes,” Phillips said. “We are confident in this league and that it will remain a premier conference in college athletics for the long-term future.”
The lawsuits come amid tension as conference expansion and realignment reshape the national landscape as schools chase more and more revenue. In the case of the ACC, the league is bringing in record revenues and payouts yet lags behind the Big Ten and Southeastern Conference.
The grant-of-rights provision, twice agreed to by the member schools in the years before the launch of the ACC Network channel in 2019, is designed to deter defections in future realignment since a school would not be able to bring its TV rights to enhance a new suitor’s media deal. That would mean hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue, separate from having to pay a nine-figure exit fee.
Schools that could leave with reduced or no financial impact could jeopardize the league’s long-term future.
“The fact is that every member of this conference willingly signed the grant of rights unanimous, and quite frankly eagerly, agreed to our current television contract and the launch of the ACC Network,” Phillips said. “The ACC — our collective membership and conference office — deserves better.”
According to tax documents, the ACC distributed an average of $44.8 million per school for 14 football-playing members (Notre Dame receives a partial share as a football independent) and $706.6 million in total revenue for the 2022-23 season. That is third behind the Big Ten ($879.9 million revenue, $60.3 million average payout) and SEC ($852.6 million, $51.3 million), and ahead of the smaller Big 12 ($510.7 million, $44.2 million).
Those numbers don’t factor in the recent wave of realignment that tore apart the Pac-12 to leave only four power conferences. The ACC is adding Stanford, California and SMU this year; USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington are entering the Big Ten from the Pac-12; and Texas and Oklahoma have left the Big 12 for the SEC.
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://apnews.com/cfbtop25
veryGood! (68)
Related
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Arkansas man used losing $20 scratch-off ticket to win $500,000 in play-it-again game
- Florida State QB Jordan Travis out with leg injury, No. 4 Seminoles rout North Alabama 58-13
- Estonia’s Kallas is reelected to lead party despite a scandal over husband’s Russia business ties
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- A law that launched 2,500 sex abuse suits is expiring. It’s left a trail of claims vs. celebs, jails
- Jordan’s foreign minister offers blistering criticism of Israel as its war on Hamas rages on
- More than a foot of snow, 100 mph wind gusts possible as storm approaches Sierra Nevada
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Brazil surprise songs: See the tunes Taylor Swift played in Rio de Janeiro
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Fox News and others lied about the 2020 election being stolen. Is cable news broken?
- 'Day' is a sad story of middle-aged disillusionment
- The Vatican broadens public access to an ancient Roman necropolis
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Michigan football program revealed as either dirty or exceptionally sloppy
- Check Out All These Bachelor Nation Couples Who Recently Got Married
- 'The Crown' Season 6: When does Part 2 come out? Release date, cast, how to watch
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
$1.35 billion Mega Millions winner sues mother of his child for disclosing jackpot win
Sugar prices are rising worldwide after bad weather tied to El Nino damaged crops in Asia
He lost $200,000 when FTX imploded last year. He's still waiting to get it back
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
Baltimore police fired 36 shots at armed man, bodycam recordings show
Africa's flourishing art scene is a smash hit at Art X
Baltimore police fired 36 shots at armed man, bodycam recordings show