Larry Scott

Larry Scott, Pac-12 Commissioner, speaks during Pac-12 Football Media Days, Thursday, July 30, 2015, in Burbank, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

My two cents: Pac-12 Networks, DirecTV mess could be Scott's undoingย 

Pac-12 commissionerย Larry Scottโ€™s contract runs for three more school years, through June 2018, with a total compensation estimated at $3.5 million per year.

If thatโ€™s not security, what is?

But his failure to reach a deal with DirecTV last week is a blow of such significance that you wonder if the leagueโ€™s chancellors and athletic directors might begin to wonder if heโ€™s the person to take them forward. The potential profitability and distribution growth of the Pac-12 Networks is stalled.

Almost every athletic director expected more than a $21 million per-year return from Scottโ€™s media rights deal, and more than last yearโ€™s $1 million-per-school take from the Pac-12 Networks.

Most of Scottโ€™s accomplishments were put on a tee for him (or anyone) replacing the old administration.

The $3.1 billion media rights package was, it looks now, average. The addition of Utah and Colorado didnโ€™t turn heads (except in Denver and Salt Lake City). Moving the menโ€™s basketball tournament to Las Vegas was a no-brainer.

Scott has taken significant heat for late start times in football and basketball. The Pac-12 Networks is bland and often unwatchable, populated with a flank of not-ready-for-prime-time analysts and on-air personalities. Its standard fare in live broadcasts is a Washington State-Arizona State basketball game and an Oregon State-Colorado football game.

The inability to become part of the DirecTV lineup stalls the league with an unimpressive 4 million subscribers within the Pac-12 footprint. And in a league with unprecedented spending at each school, nobodyโ€™s going to get rich off that.


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