BCS head responds to senators on money question

BCS head responds to senators on money question

Published May. 21, 2010 8:05 p.m. ET

BCS executive director Bill Hancock wants higher education officials to make the decisions about college football without interference from the U.S. government.

In a letter posted Friday on the NCAA website, Hancock responded to questions posed by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) in March. They were seeking information about the Bowl Championship Series, its structure and governance and how television revenue is distributed among schools - particularly those schools not playing in BCS conferences.

In a five-page letter and six pages of attachments, Hancock noted that BCS participation is voluntary - apparently in response to the senators' statement that the BCS ``apparently considers itself an 'arrangement''' in which there is a ``lack of transparency.''

``While I appreciate your interest, I believe that decisions about college football should be made by university presidents, athletics directors, coaches and conference commissioners rather than by members of Congress,'' Hancock wrote.

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He cited the example of Utah, a Mountain West school that played in the Sugar Bowl following the 2008 season. Without the BCS, Hancock wrote, the Utes likely would have been sent to the less glamorous - and lucrative - Las Vegas Bowl. He said the Las Vegas Bowl payout was approximately $900,000 while the conference got $9 million for participating in the Sugar Bowl.

And contrary to conventional wisdom, Hancock wrote, non-BCS conferences received a record $24 million from last year's BCS games.

``If the University of Utah qualifies for a BCS game in the 2010-11 season, it will earn for its conference approximately $24.7 million, which, under the agreement among the Mountain West and the other four (non-BCS) conferences, would then be divided among the five conferences,'' Hancock wrote. ``The Mountain West certainly could keep all $24.7 million within the conference, or Utah could keep it all.''

He explained that the decision about how to split the money was determined by the five non-BCS conferences that play in the Football Bowl Subdivision.

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Online:

NCAA details on Hancock, senators letters: http://bit.ly/dh0nlk

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