Are...you citing a blog preseason poll (in early May) to support Kaos's position that Auburn will be left out of any prospective "super leagues"????
I feel like my head might explode.
We ain't gettin' the snub on any Super Conference. Here's a long copy/pasta from 247 written this past December. Just scroll to the good parts.
From overwhelming fan support to expansive media contracts and conference revenue sharing, college football is big business and some programs are expected to recover in record-setting financial fashion following a return to normalcy this season. With attendance numbers beginning to strengthen again, the programs in this list saw substantially-improved revenue figures this fall, but that data isn't available just yet.
Using financial information from Forbes, GOBankingRates ranked the top 25 teams based on their three-year average revenue prior to the start of the 2021 season. A running total of each program's "three-year average profit" was also used for reference.
The pandemic-infused season of 2020 altered some of these numbers and those will be reflected when the next grouping of fiscal averages are released spring 2022.
Here's a look at college football's most valuable programs entering the 2022 season.
25. Clemson Tigers
Estimated annual value: $77 million
With a three-year profit average of $27 million according to the GoBankingRates study, Clemson football is worth more now than it ever has been previously because of Dabo Swinney and the program's two national championships in recent years. Will the Tigers sustain their success after losing veteran coordinators Brent Venables and Tony Elliott to head coaching jobs this month? Clemson will also have a new athletic director heading into the offseason.
24. Ole Miss Rebels
Estimated annual value: $84 million
As long as the Rebels are able to keep Lane Kiffin as their head coach, this number should soar in the coming years. Ole Miss heads to the Sugar Bowl this season after winning 10 games, the most ever during the regular season at the program.
23. Wisconsin Badgers
Estimated annual value: $86 million
Like all major college football programs, Wisconsin's updated numbers over a three-year average (when those are available in 2022) will be lower thanks to the pandemic and its effect on revenue. The Badgers' athletic department reportedly cut $26 million in expenses during the past fiscal, a number likely bigger at other programs.
22. Michigan State Spartans
Estimated annual value: $87 million
Mel Tucker and the Spartans agreed to a 10-year, $95 million contract extension this season after a 10-2 finish and trip to the New Year's Six, a banner year at Michigan State who is investing in its future with the sizable deal.
21. Iowa Hawkeyes
Estimated annual value: $89 million
One of several Big Ten football programs in the top 25 nationally, Iowa keeps printing money thanks to success and a hungry fanbase. The Hawkeyes finished one win shy of a conference championship this season under veteran Kirk Ferentz.
20. Nebraska Huskers
Estimated annual value: $91 million
Following a staff overhaul, Scott Frost accepted a salary reduction for 2022 earlier this season on a restructured deal. Despite four-consecutive losing seasons under his watch, Nebraska fans have not wavered in their support as one of college football's most loyal groups.
19. Washington Huskies
Estimated annual value: $92 million
Washington hopes the hire of Kalen DeBoer brings instant credibility to a program that has fallen on hard times since Chris Petersen's departure. The contract is for five years and worth up to $16.5 million before incentives kick in based on DeBoer's level of success. Seems affordable compared to other signings this cycle, doesn't?
18. USC Trojans
Estimated annual value: $93 million
Keep this number in mind and let's revisit five years down the road when new coach Lincoln Riley has the Trojans inside the top five nationally as a perennial championship contender. USC won this season's coaching carousel after coaxing Riley away from Oklahoma with a record contract.
17. Arkansas Razorbacks
Estimated annual value: $95 million
This number will continue to rise under the direction of Sam Pittman, who took a dormant SEC program and pushed the Razorbacks to eight wins in Year 2. An Outback Bowl win would go a long way in continuing this team's momentum into 2022 and create quite the fanfare for next season.
16. South Carolina Gamecocks
Estimated annual value: $95 million
The end of the Will Muschamp era is 2020 resulted in a sizable buyout, but the Gamecocks believe they've got the right guy in charge now with Shane Beamer taking over. Beamer finished 6-6 in his first season at a program that was in the SEC cellar, so it's obvious South Carolina is moving in a positive direction.
T-15. Florida State Seminoles
Estimated annual value: $96 million
FSU felt it had to make a change in leadership in 2019 when the Seminoles departed ways with Willie Taggart before landing Memphis coach Mike Norvell. A pandemic-infused campaign ensued, but there was hope entering a full season in 2021 that progress would be noticeable. FSU missed out on bowl season with a loss to Florida, but the program is on solid footing, or at least better than it was two years ago.
T-15. Oregon Ducks
Estimated annual value: $96 million
With Nike founder Phil Knight as the program's biggest donor is making sure to fill its current coaching vacancy following Mario Cristobal's departure to Miami with the right choice. The Ducks have one of college football's most recognizable brands and is trying to get back to its heightened level of success sustained under Chip Kelly's reign.
13. Penn State Nittany Lions
Estimated annual value: $104 million
Like other major programs who have invested in their head coach, James Franklin is currently embarking on a new, 10-year deal with the Nittany Lions. It's clear the power brass in Happy Valley believe in Franklin and don't want to see him go elsewhere in the future.
12. Tennessee Volunteers
Estimated annual value: $113 million
Tennessee is energized with the arrival of coach Josh Heupel and will try and end its season with a win in Nashville against Purdue in the Music City Bowl. Positive momentum is all any program could ask for entering 2022 and still recovering from revenue losses during the 2020 season.
11. LSU Tigers
Estimated annual value: $114 million
LSU is banking on new coach Brian Kelly to challenge for championships after bringing him over from Notre Dame for a sizable fee. Revenue numbers are a three-year stretch are widely-skewed for the Tigers, given their perfect season in 2019 that was followed by two disappointing campaigns in the middle of a pandemic.
T-10. Auburn Tigers
Estimated annual value: $117 million
Per Auburn Undercover, Auburn and the other 13 colleges in the SEC received a $23 million supplement from the league to help with the finances occurred dealing with lost revenues as the result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Auburn was limited to 20 percent capacity for home football games last season, the major revenue-producing sport. Additionally, the league’s stringent testing requirements added expenses for programs in all sports.
T-10. Florida Gators
Estimated annual value: $117 million
Can the Gators get back to being an annual title contender at an Urban Meyer-like level? Those are the expectations in Gainesville and is precisely why Florida moved on from Dan Mullen and his buyout in November in favor of Louisiana's Billy Napier. Florida has shifted recent focus to facility improvements too, a big step in becoming a mainstay again inside the top 10.
8. Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Estimated annual value: $120 million
Notre Dame enters an era of somewhat uncertainly in 2022 with 35-year-old defensive coordinator Marcus Freeman taking over as a first-time head coach, this coming after Brian Kelly unexpectedly left for LSU without notice. Fans are energized and ready to support Freeman, but like all new coaches, the wins must come early.
7. Georgia Bulldogs
Estimated annual value: $125 million
No SEC program has made a bigger statement than Georgia this season, but the Bulldogs could not finish the deal in Atlanta against Alabama. However, the quest for the program's first national championship since 1980 is still in play for Kirby Smart's team. The nation's most consistent recruiter alongside Alabama, Georgia is built to last under Smart, but needs to find a way to win those showdown games against the Crimson Tide.
6. OKLAHOMA SOONERS
Estimated annual value: $129 million
There's a season Brent Venables didn't take the Auburn job in 2020 and waited for a prime opportunity at blueblood Oklahoma. This program is already built to win big and despite losing coach Lincoln Riley to USC this month, should not miss a beat in terms of annual revenue with the former Clemson defensive coordinator and Sooners assistant coming back to lead. The promise of SEC sizable growth in the coming years as a new entry into the nation's superleague will only expand Oklahoma's footprint.
5. OHIO STATE BUCKEYES
Estimated annual value: $132 million
Ohio State sells itself, but you have to think many were worried that losing Urban Meyer a couple years ago may have resulted in a diminished placement within the Big Ten, but the opposite has happened. Ohio State has continued its impressive play as an annual title contender under Ryan Day and the 2021 season is the first time in five years the Buckeyes did not play for a Big Ten Championship. Ohio State changed defensive coordinators to make sure two regular-season losses don't show up against next fall.
4. ALABAMA CRIMSON TIDE
Estimated annual value: $134 million
There doesn't seem to be a shut-off switch for the SEC's annual money-printer, not with Nick Saban signed through 2028 and the national championship continuing to go through Tuscaloosa every year. Alabama won the national title during the abbreviated 2020 campaign and has a chance to win another this season after knocking off Georgia for the league title earlier this month. Sustained success is one of the toughest challenges in sports and somehow, the Crimson Tide have managed to be the "it" program for more than a decade without a hiccup.
3. MICHIGAN WOLVERINES
Estimated annual value: $139 million
If Michigan wins the national championship this season, there's a chance the Wolverines could be in the No. 2 or top spot by the time revenue figures are updated sometime after the next fiscal year. Jim Harbaugh and the Wolverines captured the program's first Big Ten title in more than a decade, have sold-out the Big House every home game during an era in which ranked teams are finding it increasingly more difficult to fill venues weekly and now have seen their star his supernova status with a playoff trip. No program nationally has done more for its bottom line than the Wolverines in 2021.
T-1. TEXAS A&M AGGIES
Estimated annual value: $147 million
Ten years and $75 million. That's what deep-pocketed Texas A&M supporters were willing to pay Jimbo Fisher a couple of years ago to leave Florida State for the Aggies and bring a title to College Station, Texas. It hasn't happened yet, but the Aggies are in a better spot as an annual contender and have made a divot in SEC recruiting. Losing Mike Elko to Duke leaves a substantial hole on Fisher's staff with the Early Signing Period approaching. Texas A&M is in a great place financially, even post pandemic, and resources being earmarked for football is a great sign for Fisher and his staff.
T-1. TEXAS LONGHORNS
Estimated annual value: $147 million
Football is everything in Texas, evidenced by the two programs in this list both being from the Lonestar State. The Longhorns exhausted resources and put everything they had into Steve Sarkisian and a new coaching regime this season and it still resulted in a six-game losing skid at one point, the longest drought for Texas since the 1950s. It got worse before it got better and forward process must be shown in 2022 for the revenue giant in Austin.