What was the PAC 12 Smoking?

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Pac 12 Football

Just how did the PAC 12 3 billion dollar – 12-year come about?  How did pull off the amazing television agreement?  Find out here:

LOS ANGELES — It was a tense negotiation. and ESPN were paying about $54 million a year for TV rights to Pac-12 Conference games. The Pac-12 guys wanted five times that. And a 12-year commitment.

The networks were so taken aback that a top executive sarcastically asked if the Pac-12 was smoking something, according to people who witnessed the exchange but spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the deal.

But in the end, the two sides agreed to the biggest TV rights contract in college sports history — a 12-year, $3 billion deal, which works out to a per-year average of $250 million.

Some of the power behind the deal came from Evolution Media Capital, a boutique investment bank and advisory firm founded in 2008 by Rick Hess, who was head of Creative Artists Agency’s Film Finance Group, and Robert Stanley, who had been in charge of Merrill Lynch’s entertainment and intellectual property group.

EMC has quietly become a force in both the entertainment and sports worlds. Staying out of the limelight, the firm, which counts CAA as one of its owners, has orchestrated more than 20 deals with a combined value of $15 billion.

“We’ve built a very formidable company below the radar,” said EMC partner Alan Gold, who specializes in sports media.

EMC had a lot to do with making the Pac-12 deal fly. The advisory firm observed that cable giant Comcast was about to close on its purchase of NBCUniversal. EMC was betting that Comcast would want to make a big splash in sports rights for NBC Sports Network as a way of competing with rivals ESPN and Fox Sports. Hess and Stanley advised the Pac-12 to wait for Comcast to emerge as a bidder before shopping the rights.

“I knew it was under-leveraged,” Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott said. “EMC provided me some great advice and counsel, and as a result I made some significant changes to the structure of the conference.”

Among those changes were the addition of two schools, making the Pac-10 the Pac-12; creating a football championship game; and launching its own cable channel next August. The result: Comcast ended up offering about $225 million a year, driving Fox and ESPN to raise their offer to $250 million.

Among the sales that EMC had a hand in were the Texas Rangers for $550 million, the Philadelphia 76ers for $280 million and entertainment company CKX for $509 million. EMC also negotiated pricey new TV deals for the Boston Celtics and San Diego Padres and advised the Michael Jackson estate on its refinancing of the Sony ATV Beatles library. EMC is representing investor Stanley Gold and the Disney family in their effort to acquire the Dodgers.

For CAA, which holds a large stake in EMC and houses the firm in its Century City, Calif., headquarters, the relationship is part of its strategy to expand beyond its traditional talent representation and create new revenue streams at a time when the movie and TV industries are tightening their belts.

>>Continue Reading Pac 12 Football Teams

College Football Playoff: What Will Come out of BCS Commissioners’ Meeting? The Pac-12 would like a four-team playoff that is filled with the conference champions. The Big Ten would also like a four-team playoff, but they would prefer that the semifinal games would be home games for the higher seeds. Big 12 commissioner Chuck

BcS commissioners to meet, continue playoff discussions How those four teams would be selected could be a topic of discussion among the power conference commissioners today. The Big Ten is reportedly in favor of a four-team playoff in which the semifinal games would be played at on-campus venues. The Pac-12

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