SCOTTSDALE โ Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark โcertainly wasnโt happyโ with the College Football Playoffโs revenue distribution plan starting in 2026 โ a plan that leaves his conference and the ACC at a significant disadvantage to the SEC and Big Ten โ but wasnโt in a position to complain.
His competitive streak, honed over the decades, wouldnโt allow it.
โIโm a believer that if you create value, you need to be rewarded โ thatโs just how I look at life,โ Yormark said Wednesday following the Big 12โs spring meetings at a Scottsdale resort.
Yormark addressed a series of issues at the forefront of college athletics during two public sessions: the first with a small group of reporters; the second as a panelist on college football during an event at the annual Fiesta Summit.
On CFP revenue
The conferences agreed earlier this spring to a revenue-sharing plan for the next contract cycle with ESPN, which begins in 2026.
It allocates about 60% of the reported $1.3 billion in annual revenue to Big Ten and SEC, with the ACC and Big 12 accounting for approximately 30%. The breakdown was based, in part, on CFP participation over the past decade.
Teams in the new Big 12 have accounted for just two of the 40 semifinal berths, with Cincinnati and TCU earning bids. The SEC and Big Ten combined for 29 spots.
โWhen you look at the first 10 years of the CFP,โ Yormark said, โwe didnโt perform probably as well as we would have liked. Thatโs OK. History might not repeat itself.โ
On the CFP โopenerโ
The Big 12 and ACC had little leverage with the Big Ten and SEC, which feature most of the biggest brands in the sport. But during the negotiations, Yormark pushed for whatโs called a โlook-inโ (or โopenerโ) in the contract midway through the six-year term.
It gives the commissioners a chance to reconfigure the economic piece if participation trends shift from the benchmarks used to create the initial distribution plan.
โHaving that look-in made sense for a lot of different reasons,โ Yormark said.
โI certainly wasnโt happy with the distribution ... And I donโt think our (athletic directors) or our coaches are either, but weโre going to continue to invest for the right reasons.
โWeโre going to continue to build football. Itโs at the core of what we do, and Iโm excited about the future.โ
On CFP expansion
While the revenue model for the next edition of the CFP was established earlier this spring, many specifics are unresolved, including the number of teams.
The event is expanding to 12 teams for the 2024-25 seasons. But starting in the fall of 2026, it could grow to 14.
โIf we end up going to 14 and we can further enhance the championship experience for more teams and more student-athletes, thatโs great,โ Yormark said.
โMore is good, but the proof is in the details, and Iโm excited to see how this year plays out at 12.โ
On college football separating
Many in college sports believe football should be declared a separate entity from all other NCAA sports, including basketball.
A group of sports executives even pitched the โsuper leagueโ concept to conferences in recent months.
โI think thatโs noise,โ Yormark said. โI donโt see that happening for the foreseeable future.โ
On NCAA Tournament expansion
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has been perhaps the greatest proponent of exploring an expansion of March Madness, which has featured 64 or 68 teams since 1985. The expanded field size often cited is 78 teams.
The Big 12 is one of the top basketball conferences in the country and will get bigger and stronger next season with the addition of Arizona, ASU, Utah and Colorado.
Yormark said the coaches are in favor of expansion โin theory.โ
โBut what does that number look like?โ he added. โThe devil is in the details.โ
Critics of expansion worry that the power conferences will gobble all the newly created spots and marginalize the mid-majors and smaller schools that give the tournament its captivating chaos and upsets.
โYou donโt want to mess with something thatโs great,โ Yormark said, โbut if there are chances and opportunities to modify a little bit, to maybe provide more access, to amplify the experience, to look at it slightly differently, we owe it to ourselves to do that.โ
โIโm a firm believer that from time to time, youโve got to put things through an audit.โ