NBC Sports is seeking $70 million per year to broadcast the Big Ten Football Championship Game, according to people familiar with the negotiations. The figure represents NBC's internal valuation for a single-game inventory asset that will sit inside the network's existing $350 million annual Big Ten package, which begins in the 2023 season. The conference has not committed to the number.
The Big Ten currently does not charge a standalone fee for its championship game. Fox, CBS, and NBC split regular-season inventory under a seven-year, $8 billion deal announced in August 2022, with championship placement rotating among partners. NBC's pitch suggests the network believes the December showcase—3.2 million average viewers in 2023—warrants discrete pricing rather than being bundled into the base package. The conference is weighing whether to accept NBC's framework or maintain rotational rights without incremental fees. A decision is expected before the 2025 media planning cycle closes in March.
The $70 million ask implies NBC values the Big Ten title game at roughly 20% of its total annual commitment, despite the game representing less than 1% of total conference football inventory. For context, ESPN pays approximately $55 million annually for the SEC Championship Game as part of its $300 million SEC deal, though that contract predates the league's 2024 expansion to sixteen teams. The ACC Championship Game, broadcast by ABC, carries an estimated $40–45 million valuation within ESPN's $240 million annual ACC package. NBC's number would position the Big Ten title game as the most expensive single conference football broadcast in the sport.
The pricing mechanics matter to sponsors and team operators because championship-game valuations directly affect how conferences allocate revenue to member schools. Big Ten schools currently receive equal distributions from media rights—$60.5 million per school in fiscal 2024—but discrete championship pricing creates a ledger line that can be split separately or used to reward participants. If the conference accepts NBC's structure, schools that reach the championship game could negotiate participation bonuses tied to the standalone fee, much as College Football Playoff participants receive separate CFP payouts. Several athletic directors have privately indicated interest in such a framework, viewing it as a mechanism to reward on-field performance without disrupting base revenue shares.
The timing of NBC's pitch also reflects broader shifts in conference media strategy. The Big Ten's 2022 deal was the first major conference package to include a standalone streaming component, with Peacock carrying select games for an incremental $30 million annually. NBC's $70 million championship proposal uses similar logic: isolate high-value inventory, assign discrete pricing, and create optionality for future renegotiation. If the conference agrees, the title game becomes a line item that can be repriced independently when the broader deal comes up for renewal in 2029, rather than being buried in aggregate rights fees.
NBC's championship ask arrives as the network finalizes its 2025 Big Ten broadcast schedule, due for release in late February. The network is expected to carry 15–18 regular-season games next season, including multiple primetime slots featuring Oregon, USC, and Michigan. Whether the $70 million number holds will depend on the conference's willingness to fragment its media rights further and whether Fox or CBS counters with competing offers for championship rotation. One person close to the talks noted that Fox has not yet formally responded to NBC's pitch, but its silence is considered procedural rather than disinterest. The conference's media consultant, Endeavor, is modeling scenarios for both discrete championship pricing and status-quo rotation.
The Big Ten Championship Game is scheduled for December 6, 2025, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. NBC has not publicly commented on its pricing discussions.
The takeaway
NBC's **$70M** ask for Big Ten title game sets new conference championship pricing ceiling and creates revenue-split leverage point for member schools.
media rightsbig tennbc sportschampionship game pricingconference television
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