🏈 Contracts between six bowls, playoff still unsigned

Barely three months before kickoff, the six bowls participating in the new College Football Playoff have yet to sign contracts with the organization, CBSSports.com has learned.

CFP executive director Bill Hancock confirmed over the weekend what several sources told CBSSports.com: The bowls are still in various degrees of negotiation over several subjects in what is described as an approximately 200-page document.

"We're continuing to discuss the contracts," Hancock said. "This is nothing unusual. We're just plugging away and everything will get finished."

One high-ranking playoff official said he "wished" the contracts were signed at this late date but had total confidence deals would get done. In fact, Hancock recalled a period early in the BCS when he said the final contracts were signed shortly before the games themselves were played.
...
The CFP -- basically the commissioners of the 10 Football Bowl Subdivision conferences -- sold the rights to a playoff for the next 12 years to ESPN for $6 billion-$7 billion. Now the CFP has to come to separate agreements with the Rose, Orange, Sugar, Fiesta, Cotton and Peach Bowls.

"I'm not at all concerned about it," said Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby, whose league has a partnership with the Sugar Bowl. "They tend to be kind of dense documents. ... There's no negotiation going on, it's just a matter of committing it to writing."

Other sources contend there is much discussion and negotiation between the bowls and CFP in certain areas. Some of these bowls have decades-long traditions that extend beyond the playing field. If they felt like spending lavishly in a certain area, they spent lavishly. Ticket prices have become a significant discussion point, sources said.
...
"Things that used to be done on a handshake now require 180 pages," said one source. "They've [CFP] discovered that one size does not fit all."

The so-called "contract" bowls -- Sugar, Orange, Rose -- don't have a memorandum of understanding at this point, according to a source. Such a memorandum is considered a precursor to a formal contract.

Meanwhile, the so-called "host" bowls -- those without conference ties -- have only six-year deals with the CFP. However, CBSSports.com has learned that part of the ongoing negotiation is an additional six-year option. Also being discussed, a possible three-year "look-in" for the CFP during the first six years. That re-opening of the deal would be used evaluate the business model of those three bowls, according to a source.

There is at least the concern on the part of one host bowl that the look-in could be used to evaluate those three bowls' viability in the system beyond the first six years.

The six-year deal for the host bowls shouldn't be construed as chance for the playoff to go to eight teams in mid-stream said a person with intimate knowledge of the CFP. ESPN CEO Jon Skipper and Hancock told reporters 18 months ago that the playoff would remain at four teams for the length of the deal. Since then, commissioners and CFP officials have repeated the same mantra.

"Is there the potential to go to eight or more?" said one person closely aligned with the CFP bowls. "We've been vehemently told no by everybody. ... All of them have said it's 12 years. That's what the presidents want. That's what the commissioners want."

Continue reading...
 
Back
Top Bottom