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State of the Screens

College Football Enters the Super Conference Era

By August 30, 2024No Comments

Previous CFB previews: 2023 | 2022 | 2021

Five big questions re: college football on TV:
1) What is different about college football this year?
2) How will the playoff work?
3) How are the conferences set up?
4) Which teams draw the largest TV audiences?
5) What is driving conference realignment?

Big question #1: What is different about college football this year?

Key changes in college football for 2024:
1) The playoff will expand from 4 to 12 teams
2) Major conference realignment

Big question #2: How will the playoff work?

Key details for expanded college football playoff:
1) 12 teams
2) 5 highest-ranked conference champions get automatic bids
3) 7 at-large bids
4) Top 4 seeds get a first-round bye
5) First-round games are played on campus

Big question #3: How are the conferences set up?

Key details on conference realignment:
1) The Big Ten expands to 18 teams (+ Oregon, USC, UCLA, and Washington)
2) The SEC grows to 16 teams (+ Oklahoma and Texas)
3) The Big 12 increases to 16 teams (+ Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah)(- Oklahoma and Texas)
4) The ACC expands to 17 teams (+ Cal, Stanford, and SMU)
5) The Pac-12 is reduced to just Oregon State and Washington State

Wow: Washington and Cal will each travel 8K+ miles during the regular season!

Video: Why geography no longer matters in College Football

Big question #4: Which teams draw the largest TV audiences?

Most watched teams by average viewership during the 2023 season, according to Front Office Sports:
1) Alabama – 7.1M
2) Ohio State – 6.1M
3) Colorado – 6.0M
4) Georgia – 5.9M
5) Michigan – 5.6M
6) Tennessee – 4.6M
7) Oregon – 4.4M
8) Texas – 4.3M
9) Florida State – 4.2M
10) Notre Dame – 4.2M

Wow: 18 schools account for 50%+ of all college football viewership!

Bottom line #1: The Big Ten and SEC will account for ≈ 57% of all college football viewing time.

Big question #5: What is driving conference realignment?

Quick answer: Revenue from TV rights.  Media rights account for 34%+ of revenue for Power 5 conference teams.

Bottom line: More viewers = More $$$

Increase in TV exposure from conference realignment according to Nielsen:
1) Big Ten – ↑ 26%
2) SEC – ↑ 15%
3) ACC – ↑ 13%
4) Big 12 – ↑ 1%
5) Pac 12 – ↓ 88%

Flashback #1: College Football Goes BIG with Media Rights

Flashback #2: Game of Dollars: TV Deals Drive College Football Realignment 

Conference revenue (YoY growth) according to Sportico:
1) Big Ten – $880M
2) SEC – $853M

Average viewers for College Football by network according to Nielsen:
1) CBS – 5.1M
2) Fox – 4.0M
3) ABC – 4.0M
4) NBC – 2.8M
5) ESPN – 2.0M

Michael Beach

Michael Beach is the Chief Executive Officer of Cross Screen Media, a media analytics and software company that enables marketers to plan, activate, and measure CTV and linear TV at the local level. Michael is also the founder and editor of State of the Screens, a weekly newsletter focused on video advertising that is a must-read for thought leaders in the advertising industry. He has appeared in such publications as PBS Frontline, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Axios, CNBC and Bloomberg, and on NPR’s Planet Money podcast.