In the era of decreasing attendance across the board and various schools trying to develop inventive ways of getting fans inside stadiums on Saturday, college football remains a money-printing monster for most Top 25 programs. Conference are distributing record revenue checks thanks to enhanced revenue checks and the arrival of the College Football Playoff several years ago that has been wildly successful in its infancy — and will likely soon expand for more free dollars.
The Big Ten Conference had nearly $759 million in revenue in fiscal 2018, a year-over-year revenue increase of 48 percent, which is an average of $54 million doled out to each league member and the SEC wasn't far behind.
How does that breakdown look for every school in the Power 5 ranks, you ask? The U.S. Department of Education requires mandatory annual filings through the Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act and numbers for the latest fiscal year have now surfaced.
Penn Live this week uncovered the new figures through EADA data reports and ranked all 65 Power 5 football programs in order of gross revenue over the past fiscal year (July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019). These numbers reflect the 2018 college football season and the spring practice that followed.
Beginning with the lowest-performing first and making our way to the most lucrative, here's a bird's eye view on the nation's richest — and poorest — programs:
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March 25, 2020 at 06:36PM
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Ranking college football's richest, poorest programs - 247Sports
"football" - Google News
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