USC and UCLA, two of the Pac-12’s flagship programs, are planning to leave the conference for the Big Ten as early as 2024, sources confirmed to ESPN on Thursday.
The Mercury News first reported the news.
There is still a formal notification process, as the two schools have to let the Pac-12 know their intentions to leave. USC and UCLA also have to formally apply to the Big Ten. According to a source, that process is underway.
Multiple sources told ESPN on Thursday that the move is expected to happen. A source called the next steps “formalities” and an announcement could come within the next 24 hours.
A source said that the exploration of the finances and what it would take to make the move have been going on for weeks. While finances played a big role in the move, competitiveness, brand and the overall landscape of the future of the sport played a bigger role.
“USC and UCLA have to make the decisions to position them best for the long term,” said a source familiar with the move. “The future is so uncertain we need to be operating from a position of strength.”
The reason why this move would be less disruptive than potential moves in the ACC is that both USC and UCLA have grant of rights that are tied to the current Pac-12 television contract, which expires after the 2023 football season and 2023-24 school year. That’s why the expectation is that both schools can go to the league for the 2024-25 season and not suffer any financial penalty.
Pac-12 officials had been nudging both Los Angeles schools for years to extend the grant of rights. The fact that they didn’t, hinted that they had greater ambition.
The financial pressures being felt by the Pac-12 are similar to those being felt in the ACC and beyond, as conference revenue projections — which can vary and are not always linear — have the SEC and Big Ten making nearly double of some of the other Power 5 leagues later this decade. Those financial pressures left USC and UCLA with the choice of bullying the Pac-12 for unequal revenue shares or going elsewhere and having a seat at the table for the long-term. The impact of the finances not only will allow them to stay competitive nationally in football, but they can also sustain the support for all of the sports, including women’s sports and non-revenue sports.
“With Texas and Oklahoma going to the SEC, it became evident for those schools that there was only one option,” said the source familiar with the move.
It will be interesting to see how this will impact Fox’s upcoming television deal with the Big Ten, which is expected to be announced in the upcoming weeks. The addition of the two schools brings in both the West Coast and one of the country’s most appealing media markets.
The move is gutting for the future of the Pac-12, as Fox’s added investment in UCLA and USC inventory in the Big Ten means that whoever invests in the Pac-12, which Fox has long owned part of, will be decreased significantly. This move leaves the league with Oregon and Washington as its top schools after losing the two biggest brand names.
“I was always of the opinion that UCLA couldn’t leave Cal,” said a Pac-12 source. “There’s no more political state than that or system than that. That was very surprising.”
Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff was not immediately available for comment.