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Amid COVID-19 pandemic, Big 12's distribution of revenue to schools will be lower yet again

The Big 12 Conference is distributing about $345 million of revenue to its 10 schools, the second year in a row that figure has been lower because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Each school will get about $34.5 million for the 2020-21 fiscal year, down from $37.7 million announced at this time last year when COVID-19 numbers were still on the rise and the NCAA had canceled showcase events including the NCAA men's and women's basketball tournaments.

Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said Tuesday, at the end of two days of league board meetings held virtually, that overall revenue was about $50 million short of what had been expected before COVID-19. But considering the uncertainty of things when the current school year began last fall, before widespread vaccinations and lower infection rates, things could have been much worse.

"Looking at it at this time last year or even a couple, three months later than this, if we could have signed up for $35 million, we would have done it in a heartbeat," Bowlsby said.

While acknowledging there are still variables and unknowns, Bowlsby anticipates Big 12 revenue distribution pushing above $40 million per school next year.

The revenue shortfall of about $50 million this school year was primarily because of reduced money from TV contracts, lower ticket sales and not having a team in the College Football Playoff. There were restrictions on the number of the fans, if any, who could attend games. There were also fewer games to televise during football season.

Each Big 12 football team had a 10-game regular season schedule, with only one nonconference game around its round-robin league schedule. Four league teams played only eight of nine scheduled conference games.

The Big 12 didn't provide supplemental revenue distribution like the Southeastern Conference did last week by giving each of its 14 member schools $23 million to help offset the financial impact of COVID-19 on their athletic programs.

Bowlsby said the Big 12 board, made up of the schools' presidents and chancellors, decided last summer to help on an institution-by-institution basis, as needed, rather than an outright supplement to all of them.

"They didn't want to have to mortgage any of our future in order to take a loan or borrow against TV money or any of those things," Bowlsby said.

The SEC said it planned to use future conference revenues from increased media rights fees to pay for the one-time supplement to the 2020-21 fiscal year payouts. The SEC will begin allocating a portion of those media rights fees starting in 2025 to pay for the supplemental distribution.

Big 12 revenues had increased 13 years in a row before falling to about $37.7 million for each school for the 2019-2020 school year, about $1.1 million lower than the previous year.