10 departing schools fire back at WSU, OSU

With Washington as the conduit, the 10 outgoing members of the Pac-12 on Thursday filed a motion opposing the push by Washington State and Oregon State to secure a preliminary injunction that would grant the two remaining schools control of the conference.

WSU and OSU believe the 10 outbound schools have relinquished their seats on the governing board by accepting offers from other leagues, thereby leaving the Cougars and Beavers as the only voting members and in control of the assets.

The departing schools are fighting to retain their seats. In the latest filing in Whitman County (Washington) Superior Court, they argued that WSU and OSU intend to use revenue generated by the Pac-12 in the current sports year to fund their plans for the future:

“If they seize sole control of the Board, they will have control of that revenue earned by all 12 member schools. They have said publicly that they are looking to add schools from conferences that would require the Pac-12 to pay them tens of millions in exit fees.

“Allowing them to do that with current-year revenues, which the Conference members long-ago agreed would be distributed evenly to all 12 institutions, is not the status quo.

“Whatever OSU and WSU decide to do with money earned after August 1, 2024, it is fundamentally inequitable to allow them to take current year revenues and — in the words of the Conference — ‘confiscate such revenues and assets in contravention of all members’ rights to and interest in them.’”

The motion states that the Pac-12 expects “more than $100 million in revenue in each of the two years after the ten schools depart” — meaning the 2025 and 2026 fiscal years.

It does not provide a breakdown of the revenue streams, but the Rose Bowl contract, College Football Playoff distributions and NCAA Tournament units are believed to be worth tens of millions of dollars per year.

Washington’s motion of opposition is the latest move in the ongoing legal battle that began in September. A hearing on the preliminary injunction is scheduled for Nov. 14. Additionally, the two sides have also entered mediation.

The motion asks that the preliminary injunction be denied, “or, if it is granted, the order should be stayed to maintain the status quo while UW takes these issues to the Washington Supreme Court.

“At a minimum, any preliminary injunction should build in protections for UW and the other schools so that Plaintiffs’ effort to disrupt the status quo cannot be used to deprive 10 other schools of their rights during their remaining term as Conference members.”

The motion argues that the 10 departing schools have not violated the section of the bylaws that define the process of withdrawing from the conference.

OSU and WSU believe that sworn statements by commissioner George Kliavkoff and actions taken by the conference prior to Aug. 4 prove schools were systematically removed from the board after publicly announcing their intentions to join other leagues.

The motion also includes previously unreported details of efforts by OSU and WSU to secure a future in the Power Five:

— “On July 30, (Oregon State) President Murthy spoke with University of Virginia’s president about potentially joining the ACC.”

— “In a private message on August 5 produced in discovery, WSU President Kirk Schulz proposed to President Murthy
and the leaders of Stanford and Cal that all four schools could join the Big 12.” (The Bay Area schools eventually joined the ACC.)

— “The text messages between President Murthy and AD Barnes reveal that OSU was still pursuing membership in the Big 12 in late August 2023 and early September.”


In addition to the motion, the 10 schools issued the following joint statement:

“We are committed to supporting the needs and interests of our universities and of the student-athletes of all 12 member schools, who are actively participating in Pac-12 athletics this year. The attempt by Oregon State University and Washington State University to take sole control of the Pac-12 Conference would undermine this season’s Pac-12 competitions and deprive the other 10 members of the funds that have been rightfully earned by all our universities.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Todays Chronic is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – todayschronic.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment