USC athletic director Mike Bohn has a history of punching first in realignment fights
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — It was perhaps the most uncertain stretch in the history of college athletics. Chaos reigned amid rumors of realignment. A blue-blood program was threatening to abandon its conference over TV money. Another conference commissioner was openly courting that blue blood with the intent of building a super conference. At any moment it seemed one domino could fall, irreparably altering the landscape.
The unrest left Mike Bohn in a precarious position. As Colorado’s athletic director in June 2010, at the height of conference realignment drama, Bohn was wary of where the Big 12 was headed. Texas, determined to launch its own network, was flirting with the possibility of leaving for the Pac-12. The Pac-12 was flirting back. Rumors flew about Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M and Texas Tech bolting alongside the Longhorns, a move that would assuredly mark the end of the conference.
“Had the Big 12 fallen apart, Colorado would’ve been screwed,” says Chuck Neinas, Bohn’s mentor and a former interim commissioner with the Big 12. “They would’ve been in the Mountain West.”
Bohn didn’t want to risk Colorado being left behind. So he made the first move, spearheading efforts for Colorado to join what would soon become the Pac-12. One of his contingencies? That the conference assure Colorado was in the same division as USC and UCLA, which Bohn knew had a serious reach in his state.
At the time, then-Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott thanked Colorado for its “courage” in taking the first step in what seemed then would be a lengthy realignment saga. But Texas ultimately decided to stand pat, with the conference adding only Colorado and Utah.
Twelve years later, with the conference still reeling from Scott’s inability to land Texas, Bohn would again take a bold first step, this time helping lead USC along with UCLA out of the Pac-12, where they had been flagship members for more than a century, and into the Big Ten, where a windfall of new media rights revenue awaits.
Except this time, as USC’s athletic director, the move could have major implications across all of college sports. Those existential concerns start with the potential demise of the Pac-12 as a Power Five conference as the Big Ten and SEC emerge as a formidable “Power Two.”
Not that the Pac-12 was in an ideal place before the exit by USC and UCLA.
“They were concerned about the Pac-12, the television marketplace,” Neinas said. “It can’t compare to what they’re going to get as a result of going to the Big Ten. It’s one thing if it was a few dollars more, but two, three times more, you can’t pass that up.”
The prospect of adding the nation’s second-biggest market to the Big Ten was sure to command attention of television networks.
“I believe that Fox was probably the matchmaker in this,” Neinas said of the television network. “This obviously serves to improve their investment, so to speak, because USC and UCLA and the Los Angeles market bring a lot of value to the Big Ten package. I know that it’s difficult for both institutions to leave their long-established history in the Pac-12, but unfortunately, let’s face it, television is dictating what’s happening in college athletics.”
Bohn assured that the move was “about way more than resources,” but he saw the handwriting on the wall when Texas and Oklahoma announced last summer that they were leaving the Big 12 — for real, this time — for the Southeastern Conference.
“I don’t believe there’s a college administrator in the country that didn’t recognize that clearly there were two conferences that were separating themselves from everyone else,” Bohn told The Times. “That particular move further emphasized that.”
USC leaders worked to secure a seat at the table, where they could help dictate where realignment heads from here.
In past stops, Bohn didn’t always have that luxury.
When Bohn was the athletic director at Idaho and the Big West stopped playing football in 2000, he hoped to usher his school into the Western Athletic Conference. But the Vandals were passed up and left to join the far-flung Sun Belt. A few years later, Bohn left.
At Cincinnati, Bohn was also once rebuffed in realignment talks. The Bearcats were viewed as a top candidate to join the Big 12 in 2016, until the conference voted not to expand.
Rejected by the conference he once left, Bohn and his chief of staff, Brandon Sosna, reset their plans for about six years down the line, when they believed major realignment was inevitable amid an influx of new media rights deals.
Cincinnati would ultimately beat that timeline, accepting an invite to the Big 12 last September.
By then, Bohn was off to USC, where, for the fourth time, he would help usher a school from one conference to another.
latimes.com
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Hey, Buckeye here. Is this nuts or what!?! I think it’s great. Have to think a couple or few more of your former conference rivals will follow. Who gets us SFO? Stanford, Cal or both or neither? Personally, I think it’s ND, then Cal and/or Stanford and then OU and UW are third or fourth in line. I don’t see the B1G and SEC growing beyond 20 schools, 24 max. Everyone else is what we call the G5 today. If the SEC is smart, they grab Arizona and ASU. Clemson doesn’t move the eyeballs needle. Don’t think FSU does much… Read more »
We are. We be ready. ✌
John Canzano has a good point of view on the Pac12 without USC
https://www.johncanzano.com/p/canzano-pac-12-gut-punch-comes-with?sd=pf
Ironically, Larry Scott did USC and UCLA a HUGE favor by rejecting ESPN’s offer to extend their media rights deal which would have legally tied the L.A. teams to the Pac-12 into the 2030s. I guess we USC fans have finally found a reason to be grateful to Scott. Thank you Larry!
What do they say about a broken clock?
It just dawned on me that this was so darned ironic. The massively hated and idiotic Larry Scott literally paved the golden road for USC to defect to the Big Ten for the big bucks and increased exposure in today’s super-changed NIL world. What is it they say? You couldn’t make this stuff up!
Allen , I think you are right. But don’t forget. The incompetence of Nikias, Haden & Swann damaged not only USC but the entire Pac-12.. I’m in the camp that believes the PAC-12 was doomed from the moment OK & TX said no to joining the conference. Had their been better leadership ( hell, any semblance of leadership) from Heritage Hall, working to promote excellence rather than parity, the trajectory of the Conference of Champions would have been totally different. Failing to take advantage of their strength & leverage damaged USC to an almost unsalvageable condition. But thanks to Folt… Read more »
BOHN & folt for credit. I think little mao was leading from behind on this deal, just like she was drug along in the hiring of LR. Bohn and Caruso were pulling the wagon on hiring Coach Riley—of this i am certain.
Andy Stankiewicz, USC’s new baseball headman, coached at Grand Canyon University since 2012 and finished his tenure with a 341-239-2 record. He led Grand Canyon to the NCAA Tourney, making it to the regional round over the last two seasons. USC was turned down by both Andrew Checketts (UCSB) and Troy Tulowitzki (TEXAS).
A good hire, he should do well at USC, better than at GCU. Boy you can never say Mike Bohn “can’t s___ and chew gum at the same time” (Lyndon Johnson on how dumb he thought Gerald Ford was)! That guy Bohn never quits, even on a holiday weekend!
AS should get better resources and support from Bohn that previous coaches did not get. I am curious if NIL for baseball will be able to compete with Triple A or even Double A MLB for talent. USC is best at getting them the most of any other college.
Hey, I love Mike Bohn. He’s the greatest. I’m not worried about Mike. I am worried about USC hiring another down-the-ladder coach (IMO) who has no experience at beating higher quality teams like USC has to start doing regularly. “Stanky’s” 10-0 victories over people like DIXIE ST, TARLETON, and SAC ST don’t really do a lot for me. I was hoping for a more prominent, proven coach against schools that compete at the highest levels of the sport. But the truth is, Bohn did the best he could here in view of USC’s current state on Dedeaux Field. He wanted… Read more »
I agree Allen. It’s about finding the talent and recruiting them into the program. Then develop them into a cohesive unit. With credentials from Grand Canyon State, I see Stanky not wowing anyone and having to prove his ability first before landing top talent. That will take a few years to accomplish this. In the meantime with the talent that walks in the door or has been ignored by the better baseball programs, what will his record be in the next few years? Bohn is taking a gamble here.
I hadn’t previously considered the 2028 Olympics as a roadblock to Bohn’s extremely difficult Trojan baseball rebuild task. LAT — “The challenges of rebuilding the roster and adapting to disruptions caused by construction ahead of the 2028 Olympics complicated the search…” To Mike Bohn’s credit, he gave it his all, obviously. There were just too many roadblocks now for him to reel in his top picks. But I’m sure “Stanky” will improve the program, absolutely no doubt. The question is, how much? Some more successful coaches who looked hard at the job, just didn’t want that task. Reality isn’t always… Read more »
Being out here in ATL, i have not heard much about the ‘28 LA olympics. What are the implied construction issues with Dedeaux Field?
Crazy huh? Doesn’t make much sense to me.
The plan is to transform the ballpark into a temporary open-air aquatics facility. Next door Uytengsu Aquatics Center, which hosted swimming events during the ’84 games, will be used as a training facility.
WTF
I was in Eugene, OR a few weeks ago. We drove by the brand new track and field stadium. Very impressive, but for T&F? They had the National Championships last weekend with maybe 20% seats filled. They sure think Steve Prefontaine is god like up there. The World T&F Championships will be there this month, first time ever in the USA.
USC has a new baseball coach???
Andy Stankiewicz, Grand Canyon U, the Rod Dedeaux USA Baseball Coach of the Year (2014), 341-239-2.
Nothing earthshaking about this hire, but I’m sure pulling for him. Coaching USC will be so vastly different and more difficult from what’s required at Grand Canyon. The Trojan baseball job has humbled so many supposedly good coaches since the old days of glory, we can only hope that Stankiewicz has what it takes. JMHO.
The changing of the Guard i.e L.A. teams being accepted in the BiG. a big plus for both teams from increased revenue, primarily from Media Rights. To me, the L.A. teams were vetted extensively based on their location, #2 media market and what they could bring in viewers nationwide. That itself was a major coup, no other teams in the PAC12 carry that Panache….academic status notwithstanding, therefore the chance any other P12 teams get an invite are rather slim. When all the expansion is completed, two or three Super Conferences are created 16-20 teams each, I feel the next strategy… Read more »
The Pac-12 has always prided itself on its higher academic standing view of itself. Now that USC, under Mike Bohn, finally was willing to assert its own self-interest, and seek the respect and money it always deserved from another conference, the Pac-12, if it even stays together, will be letting schools in that have been rejected over and over by the conference for years because of their massively lesser academic reps. Thank God USC left before the remaining mega-storm got underway. USC has positioned itself so well now to deal with the future. I’m so glad USC finally proactively looked… Read more »
I would bet that in the next 2 seasons we will see just how inferior the rest of the Pac?? has become. That would include Oregon.
Leaving the ncaa is primary. The need is to organize with true leadership, not figure heads. The status of conferences is in total flux right now and nobody can predict exactly what will boil out of it. It is going to take some real talent and leadership to get this done right. In the end is has to be unifying.
leaving the NCAA will be inevitable. Big time college football has always been hamstrung by the fools in Indianapolis. Kind of like Gulliver being tied down by lilliputians.
Someone pointed out that Mike Bohn has done more for SC than any of the ex-jock directors did. He has turned out to be a great yet elusive poker player.
That was me.😉 It is great to see USC looking like a well run organization again. We are back! FTFO!✌😎
I understand the reason why… MONEY, the root of all evil. My problem is with traveling for these players in all of the sports. Play in Columbus one week and then the following week fly to Maryland or New Jersey. I just don’t like it.
I’m going out on a limb and guessing they won’t be doing that kind of schedule and maybe every other week, but school is often closed Friday so they can fly Thursday night and catch up Friday before the game. Pro ball players do it.
These kids are young, healthy and resilient. They’ll sleep the whole flight, or listen to beats and game on their phones. Im pretty sure their bodies can absorb much more than my 59 year body can.
Absolutely. Travel will not bother these kids one bit. They will learn to use the time to their benefit. The old people complaining about the travel are just that, old people. Youth will prevail.
Time was USC and Notre Dame would spends weeks on the train to get to their annual game. A 6 hour, at most, charter flight will not be a hardship. Especially not with on line access to lectures and tutors.
This is a post that makes sense. But the Pac12 brought it on themselves. First they did not support USC with the ridiculous sanctions. We had to give up PC and the next 12 or more years. And L. Scott managed the Pac12 to bad financial situation. He spent money like crazy in SF and don’t know where the media profits went. It did not go to the schools. USC and UCLA had no choice but to go to the BIG10 where the conference management is excellent. So is the SEC. Those conferences know how to take care of their… Read more »
Why would USC and UCLA (the tag along Bruins who are already broke) ever want to stay in a lowly regarded, dying football conference, among members who fully rejoiced in USC’s unlawful NCAA takedown and also weren’t willing to improve, or even emphasize football?
Because of travel? I don’t think so.
I hope California stays in the conference. We don’t have a good football team, but it’s still fun on game day at Memorial Stadium.
The bears used to play San Jose State, so maybe that’s an option to fill the schedule opening.
That’s an interesting angle. Who knows, the Bears might be able to now be a dominant football team in the new Pac-Whatever, assuming CAL even cares about such a gridiron goal, which may be doubtful. Next thing you know, you’ll somehow squeeze into some future Rose Bowl game for the first time since Jan. 1, 1959, when the #16 Bears took on #2 IOWA (below), losing 38-12. As life has taught us all, unforeseen and unpredictable eventualities happen all the time, e.g. Larry Scott inadvertently proved to be a great USC benefactor, in hindsight. All heck could be about to… Read more »