https://theathletic.com/1081183/2019/07/17/aac-media-days-left-questions-answered-and-unresolved-for-uc/I won't copy and paste the full article (since it is behind a paywall), but there was/is definitely friction behind the scenes of the AAC. UC's AD emailed Aresco (copying counterparts at UCF and Temple) over concerns over production costs associated with increased ESPN+ digital streaming content, as well as the media rights payouts that includes "a merit-based distribution component.” Aresco responded that those concerns would be answered after the AAC-ESPN TV deal would be signed, and that that those concerns can be addressed "later" since the ESPN+ production costs won't kick in until 2021. It should be a huge red flag when a commissioner commissioner cannot (or will not) answer direct questions with regards to costs and/or payouts of a TV deal. The fact that the AAC is locked up until the 2030's under these terms is pretty alarming.
https://mattbrown.substack.com/p/what-we-actually-learned-from-mediaFrom Matt Brown:
"The TL;DR here is that the ~$7 million deal isn’t exactly ~$7 million, because schools now also have an increased production cost factor to consider, since they’re producing even more programming to fill those ESPN+ slots…not just football and men’s basketball, but other sports too. Those costs aren’t so high as to torpedo the deal, obviously, but I’ve been told it can cost thousands of dollars to produce say, a women’s basketball game. Depending on what infrastructure existed at the school beforehand, those $7 million dollars might be closer to like, $6.3. Maybe less. The devil is in those details, and it would appear not all of those details have been completely resolved."It definitely becomes clearer why and when UConn decided to bolt the AAC when it did. UConn was making - between AAC TV payouts and exit fees - ~$10 million annually from 2013-2019. The new payouts were/are nowhere close to that, and have the added expenses of carrying production costs for ESPN+ on the school's dime. If UConn was told that they would be making ~$6 million in the Big East under its new (and eventual TV deal), factoring in future tournament credits, reduced travel and increased fan support and interest in more regional games, not to mention prime exposure in NYC (and at the BET), then it makes perfect sense. For Football, any TV payouts it can acquire will be icing on the cake, in addition to more geographic matchups that will help with travel costs.