USC, UCLA move could solve college football’s ‘big game problem’

Reactions continue to pour in over the latest bombshell news that USC and UCLA — the two biggest college brands on the West Coast — are leaving the Pac-12 for the Big Ten in 2024.

The expansion has left many thinking that college football is headed toward a pro model with two mega-conferences. It’s a win for other schools in the Big Ten that feel USC and UCLA can help “carry some weight,” while it’s a blow for a Pac-12 Conference that hasn’t sent a team to the College Football Playoff since 2016.

On Monday’s “The Herd,” Colin Cowherd broke down what USC and UCLA’s move to the Big Ten means for college football and why it doesn’t come as a shock, considering recent moves from other schools.

“I was not surprised [that] USC joined the Big Ten — I was surprised UCLA went for it,” Cowherd said. “USC has been unhappy for years. The Pac-12 does not create the revenue they need. When they got Lincoln Riley, they sold him on, ‘Big things are happening.’ … They’ve thought about going independent. … They felt they were treated no better than Washington State … and USC and UCLA are almost half the TV revenue for the conference.”

What USC and UCLA’s move to Big Ten means for college football

Colin Cowherd reacts to the decision and discusses how this conference alignment affects the future of college football.

USC is coming off a 4-8 season under the new hire of head coach Riley, while UCLA finished 8-4 last season.

The Pac-12 brought in just $341 million in revenue last year and distributed only $19.8 million per school in the fiscal 2021 year, which was by far the least among Power 5 conferences (a fleeting idea these days). The Big Ten divvied up $680 million to its member schools in the same fiscal year. 

“Here [are] five questions I hear,” Cowherd continued. “‘What about the Pac-12?’ Well, it was dead five years ago. That’s somebody else’s problem. … ‘What about all the travel?’ Well, it’s bad for Olympic sports, but it’s pretty easy for football. USC and UCLA will play their out-of-conference games to start the season in September at home, and then they’ll have their 10 conference games — five on the road, maybe an occasional back-to-back.

“Folks, once Texas [and] Oklahoma decided to go to the SEC, what’re you gonna sit around and do if you’re the Big Ten or USC? … College football has a big-game problem. … College football is a litany of ugly, unwatchable, blowout, uneven games. USC and UCLA to the Big Ten solves a lot of that problem. What’s it gonna look like in 10 years? Who knows and who cares?”

With the additions of USC and UCLA, the Big Ten increases its membership to 16 teams. The SEC will also increase its membership to 16 by 2025 after voting last year to allow Oklahoma and Texas to join.


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