Financial implications of 2020 College football season cancellation

Submitted by UMProud on August 10th, 2020 at 2:14 PM

Assuming the 2020 NCAA football season is cancelled what are the financial implications?

*Broadcasters like ESPN, FOX, etc have contracts with the conferences.  Are these written with no payment clauses for acts of God like pandemics?  Assuming they have a weasel clause various articles cite a figure of about $4 billion  in revenue the conferences & universities won't see.

*Football is near the top, if not the top, generator of revenue for University athletic departments that funds much of the non-football athletic programs.  What will happen to the various related college sports and staff without this revenue?  Can most University programs weather a year with no sports revenue?

*Broadcasters have contracts with advertisers and money will have to be either returned or contracts renegotiated to cover some sort of content.  While their payouts to conferences will potentially be eliminated their loss of ad revenue will likely result in staff cuts.

*Cable providers charge $15 or so for sports related content.  Since they won't deduct broadcast fees (ESPN/FOX/etc) from their monthly rates it seems logical they will see a surge in cancellations as many sports fans keep cable or streaming subscriptions for sports.

*Sports industry itself will see an impact and this ranges from people who make/provide hot dogs, soda, concessions, sports apparel, equipment, training camps, parking lots and a whole host of things we never think about including city revenues derived from sports fans paying parking fees, visiting local restaurants, paying taxes, etc.  Prime example:  City of Detroit

If the NFL follows suit the negative financial impact to the nation, as a whole, will probably surprise most of us as no one has ever seen anything like this. 

The sports industry is facing a crushing 2020 and what 2021 looks like is anyone's guess.

SugarShane

August 10th, 2020 at 2:16 PM ^

P5 schools will all weather it

 

G5 will likely have some casualties 

 

but the ripple effects will be catastrophic.  Smaller sports programs that were previously subsidized by football will be cancelled (as happened at stanford).  Administrative positions will be cut.  

 

I feel most for the athletic department staff, the journalists and company who rely on a season for their livelihoods

gruden

August 10th, 2020 at 2:23 PM ^

Many P5 programs' AD runs in the red.  I expect a massive wave of cost-cutting.  Most coaches will see their salaries scaled way back and any facilities improvement projects in planning phases will be postponed indefinitely.  Probably some layoffs too.

Mr Miggle

August 10th, 2020 at 3:08 PM ^

Wouldn't people that want to donate money for sports donate it directly to the athletic department? I would be surprised if anything more than a token amount gets taken out of endowments to prop them up. Schools are going to be taking some big financial hits unrelated to sports. There's a question of how much endowments can be tapped to cover those losses.

 

SanDiegoWolverine

August 10th, 2020 at 5:10 PM ^

Most of the small to medium sized donations can probably be re-routed. Obviously the big donors have more control over how their money is used though. I'm sure there's enough money in most endowments that can be used as a rainy day fund. It's just a matter if the university presidents want to spend political capital on making it happen. 

Mr Miggle

August 10th, 2020 at 3:22 PM ^

This is where the major college business model comes back to bite them. In stead of revenue sharing with their players, they spend their money on extravagant facilities which they own, bloated staffs and inflated salaries with guaranteed contracts. There isn't much room to cut expenses. There would be if player salaries were their biggest expense.

jg2112

August 10th, 2020 at 2:30 PM ^

All this talk about money. It really shines a light on how this nation's priorities are so far out of line compared to the rest of the world. They focused on health, America focused on money. America has lost hundreds of thousands of people and still lost a ton of jobs and money.

America needs to get things under control. The best things that could come out of a potential cancellation of CFB would be:

(1) intercollegiate sports return to club status, as this could have a positive trickle down effect to reduce the insanity of youth competitive sports;

(2) the NFL fully funds a minor league system. I know why they don't, it'd be great if they did;

(3) universities focus on the true reason they exist.

MRunner73

August 10th, 2020 at 3:01 PM ^

Points 1 and 3 are great. Imagine returning to CFB as it was in the 1970s and earlier decades. Maybe the quality pf play and execution won't be as great but, hey, it was fun watching guys like Rob Lytle run at tailback.

College BB is now going in your point 2 direction. Good luck to Sparty getting all those 5 star recruits in 2021.

bronxblue

August 10th, 2020 at 3:41 PM ^

These are good points generally but I'd push back a bit that youth competitive sports would functionally change without big-time college sports.  If the NFL and NBA create feeder leagues as suggested then kids will just be crazy about getting into those instead.  The end goal is still the same - being a professional athlete.

Also, for a lot of kids getting athletic scholarships is a way to attend a high-quality college or university.  Turning everything into a club sport will likely just exacerbate already-deep racial and socio-economic barriers erected around higher eduction OR the creation of a shadow system that works around these limitations to get certain students into certain schools, only with less oversight and regulation.

Universities exist for a lot of reasons.  Athletics can be one of them.  The notion that there was halcyon days when everyone said their prayers and ate their vitamins and all was good in the world is mostly a by-product of a white-washing of history by sports writers, movies, and time.

SalvatoreQuattro

August 10th, 2020 at 6:48 PM ^

College football hasn’t been in club status since the 19th century. College football has been integral part of universities for 100 years. It is adhesive for the university and regional community in a time when we need as many as we can get. Your suggestion is not only unrealistic it is transgressive. 

You write this while being a follower  of a blog dedicated primarily to the sport. Being anti-college football while belonging to such a blog is...bizarre. 
 

I cannot believe 17 people liked this bullshit

Durham Blue

August 10th, 2020 at 10:44 PM ^

I have no clue what you mean by #1...please explain.  I think #2 would suck balls.  Keep the NFL's dirty fingers out of college football.  I like college football as it currently is, but with NIL payouts.  On that point, the NBA has already begun to ruin college basketball with the G league which has robbed Michigan of at least one high profile recruit thus far.  And #3 sounds wholesome yet vague.

Rabbit21

August 10th, 2020 at 2:30 PM ^

They're ummmm bad.  Anything other than that is going to have to play out.

My guess is that I imagine about 10% of FBS football programs will get cut and about 20% of all sports programs will cut down.  Along with a market correction in coaches salaries.  And that is if we only lose the 2020 season.  I imagine the 2021 season will be gone as well if people are waiting for a n effective vaccine for the all clear.  

mackbru

August 10th, 2020 at 2:50 PM ^

Big schools will survive. Small ones will struggle. Some will go bust. 

That sucks mostly for the people who will lose their jobs. And people will lose jobs. 

Beyond that, the country has bigger fish to fry. Colleges will continue, and college is about education, not sports. We’re basically the only country that makes a huge deal about sports in college. Sports are great, don’t get me wrong. But 99 percent of students don’t play varsity sports. They’re just an add-on. Great athletes will be able to play next year, presumably. So their pro careers won’t be  dashed. They’ll just have to wait a year, like most everyone else is doing. It sucks. But there are so many other more important things to worry about. 

I Like Burgers

August 10th, 2020 at 3:59 PM ^

I think people are underestimating just how bad this is going to be by focusing only on the schools and athletic departments.  Things are going to be really bad on that front for all but the top schools that bring in a ton of cash every year.  They can weather this storm by spreading the $100M loss out over several seasons. Smaller schools aren't going to have that option.

But beyond that, there are thousands and thousands of jobs and hundreds of businesses built off college football in towns all over the country.  A very large portion of those are going to go away and it may be years before they return.

MGoStrength

August 10th, 2020 at 2:53 PM ^

Sports are a luxury. We'll miss them, but if they are not a necessity. Maybe they need a market correction or a change in their models. Heck, maybe they'll realize how much money they make from supposed amateur sports and change the model to reflect what it really is.

I Like Burgers

August 10th, 2020 at 4:29 PM ^

Sports aren't a luxury anymore than the auto industry or pants are a luxury.  CFB alone is a multi-billion dollar industry.  Sports in the US as a whole is a $75B industry.  Globally its around $500B.  You can't just aww shucks and heck that away.  Not having it has far reaching consequences beyond not having a few hours of your Saturday TV filled with a game.

MRunner73

August 10th, 2020 at 2:53 PM ^

Bottom line: Everyone losses.. Yep, a ton of money will be lost. All the ad revenues, broadcaster salaries wrt to the networks, universities revenue loss, fans not spending money at host cities.

How about Ann Arbor restaurants, hotels, Ann Arbor Pioneer parking and the RV parking.

It is a very sad deal.

Newton Gimmick

August 10th, 2020 at 2:58 PM ^

Since we probably don't have the robots needed yet, broadcast a computer-simulated version

And jazz up the schedule.  Make an SEC team 'travel' north, just for the novelty

Hell, I'd watch it, I got nothin else goin on

Trebor

August 10th, 2020 at 3:00 PM ^

I'm gonna be brutally honest, I don't care about schools that will be forced to shutter programs. They made their own beds by signing these ghastly contracts for coaches, spending every dime to build palatial locker rooms and ridiculous luxuries like laser tag and indoor waterfalls, and creating layer after layer of unnecessary administrative/consulting/whatnot staffs full of coaches who failed elsewhere. All to show that net revenue is as close to zero as possible. Sorry, if you're going to treat college athletics like a business, let it fail like a business when they can't manage the finances appropriately.

Booted Blue in PA

August 10th, 2020 at 3:07 PM ^

So if a 5* recruit took a payday to commit to some school and there isn't a football season, can he decommit without returning the deposit and get paid to commit elsewhere next season?

the pandemic double dip

Brhino

August 10th, 2020 at 4:12 PM ^

Everybody's going to have less money except for all the lawyers needed to figure out how the TV deals / advertising payments / coaches' contracts / etc are going to shake out.  The lawyers are going to be billing overtime.