ACC EXPANSION Revenue-sharing plan attracts Miami
The conference pays its members the same amount of money.
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) -- Money played a large role in Miami's decision to leave the Big East and join the Atlantic Coast Conference.
But not in the way that might have been expected.
Miami officials relied less on the amounts of the offers from the two conferences and more on the ways the leagues distribute profits to all sports.
If guaranteed money over the next five years was the most important factor, then university president Donna Shalala and athletic director Paul Dee would have kept the Hurricanes in the Big East.
"Frankly, the Big East made us a better financial offer," Shalala said after the announcement Monday.
"It was a sense of the future. They're fundamentally different in the way in which they distribute money."
Equal pay
So, Miami went to the ACC largely because that conference pays all its members the same amount. In the Big East, teams received some base money, then more in a sliding bonus system that rewarded national championships and other achievements.
"More importantly, if there is a revenue-sharing situation, you can budget accordingly because you pretty much know what you're going to get," Miami athletic spokesman Mark Pray said Tuesday. "It's not predicated solely by what you get in football, and that really helps our Olympic sports."
In the 2001-02 academic year, ACC members received $9.7 million each, the highest disbursement in that conference's history.
Miami earned a reported $9.3 million that year, but even with a substantial bonus for appearing in a Bowl Championship Series game and winning the national title, the Hurricanes made less than every other ACC school.
Miami made $4 million by appearing in the 2001 season's BCS title game at the Rose Bowl; they would have made $1.7 million less otherwise.
Television
Much of the ACC money comes from TV deals.
The schools will split $69 million for the three seasons left on the conference's football TV contracts with ABC, ESPN and Jefferson-Pilot Sports. By adding Miami and Virginia Tech, the ACC figures to negotiate a much better deal next time around.
"In the Big East, which has worked for us up until now, the more successful you were, the more money you got," Shalala said. "If you look at the ACC, it's an even distribution. Everyone gets the same thing. In addition to that, the ACC could better accommodate all of our sports."
Specifically, baseball. Miami remained independent in baseball when it joined the Big East 12 years ago, a move that kept the Hurricanes from committing to at least six road trips to the Northeast every spring.
Miami was, and will remain for one more year, a Big East member in all other sports.
43
