ADVERTISEMENT

Kliavkoff attempting to block UCLA to Big Ten.

In a letter provided to the University of California Board of Regents ahead of a closed-door session Thursday to discuss UCLA's proposed move to the Big Ten conference, Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff detailed "significant concerns" he had with the move, including its effect on student-athlete mental health, increased travel and operational costs, and negative impacts on both Cal's revenue and the UC system's climate goals.

Klivakoff's letter was provided in response to a request from the regents for the conference's perspective on UCLA's move, according to a source.

"Despite all the explanations made after the fact, UCLA's decision to join the Big Ten was clearly financially motivated after the UCLA athletic department managed to accumulate more than $100 million in debt over the past three fiscal years," Kliavkoff wrote.

He said the increased revenue UCLA will receive would be completely offset by higher costs coming from added travel, the need for competitive salaries within the Big Ten and game guarantee expenses.

"UCLA currently spends approximately $8.1 million per year on travel for its teams to compete in the Pac-12 conference," Kliavkoff said. "UCLA will incur a 100% increase in its team travel costs if it flies commercial in the Big Ten ($8.1 million increase per year), a 160% increase if it charters half the time ($13.1 million per year), and a 290% increase if it charters every flight ($23 million increase per year)."

EDITOR'S PICKS​

Kliavkoff did not cite how those figures were calculated or indicate if there was genuine belief that UCLA would consider charter travel for teams other than football and basketball.

According to a source familiar with UCLA's internal estimates, the school is working with the expectation that it will spend about $6-10 million more per year on travel in the Big Ten vs. the Pac-12.

Moving to the Big Ten, Kliavkoff speculated, would also lead to UCLA spending more on salaries to fall in line with conference norms. He estimated UCLA would need to increase its athletic department salaries by about $15 million for the university to reach the average in the Big Ten.

"Any financial gains UCLA will achieve by joining the Big Ten will end up going to airline and charter companies, administrators and coaches' salaries, and other recipients rather than providing any additional resources for student-athletes," Kliavkoff said.

A spokesperson for UCLA declined comment.

UC President Michael V. Drake, who was previously the president at Ohio State, said in an interview with the New York Times, "No decisions. I think everybody is collecting information. It's an evolving situation."


Beyond the financial impact for UCLA, which is widely understood to be the driving factor in its planned move, Kliavkoff said it will also hurt Cal, which is also part of the UC system. With media rights negotiations ongoing, Kliavkoff said it was difficult to disclose the exact impact without revealing confidential information but confirmed the Pac-12 is soliciting bids with and without UCLA in the fold.

Beyond the financial component of the added travel, Kliavkoff said "published media research by the National Institutes of Health, studies conducted by the NCAA, and discussions with our own student-athlete leaders" show the move will have a negative impact on student-athletes' mental health and take away from their academic pursuits. He added that it would also be a burden for family and alumni to face cross-country trips to see UCLA's teams play.

Finally, Kliavkoff said added travel runs contrary to the UC system's climate goals and works against UCLA's commitment to "climate neutrality" by 2025.

Another big visitor


Leviticus Su'a was at the Rose Bowl last night for the game against Stanford (one of his top contenders) and made the trip to campus today to check things out in Westwood on an unofficial visit. The Bruins have been getting serious about the four-star middle linebacker from Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana as of late and looks like it will become one of the other top players in his recruitment. Arizona and Stanford have been battling it out in his recruitment this fall. He took official visits to both schools and has been on multiple unofficial visits to most programs. He values academics quite a bit. Combine that with winning football at UCLA, and it wouldn't be a shock at all to see him eventually end up staying close to home to play for the Bruins.

Could take some time to reach that point, but I do believe UCLA has made major progress with him in a short amount of time. A multi-year starter for the best high school team in the country. He'd be a significant pickup for the staff.

Login to view embedded media

EXHIBITION GAME THREAD: Concordia vs. UCLA

Obviously, the result is a foregone conclusion. After the game I’ll have postgame video and a story on the takeaways from the exhibition (without trying to read too much into it).

Things of note will definitely be the starting five that’s chosen, first few players off the bench, and how the freshmen Amari Bailey, Adem Bona and Dylan Andrews look along with the other newcomers.

Tip-off at 7 p.m.

Story on Charbonnet and lack of exposure

It was easily the biggest topic of Chip Kelly’s session earlier this morning and I was already set to write about RB Zach Charbonnet and his running style.

Then, he used Charbonnet as one of many examples of players out west not getting the attention partly due to kickoff times like the second consecutive 7:30 p.m. start UCLA will have at Arizona State this weekend.

It got me thinking back to 2015 and what I remember Christian McCaffrey said years later about his own big season.

Huge local visitor today

Login to view embedded media

Santa Ana-Mater Dei offensive lineman DeAndre Carter will be at the Rose Bowl for tonight's game against Stanford. The No. 73 overall prospect in the 2024 class has two dozen offers already with some of the schools on that list being Alabama, Georgia, USC, Michigan, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, LSU and Louisville.

Login to view embedded media

A couple of random thoughts

What happened to our TEs? CCK used the TE as a key part of his offense. Ezieke had to passed…period.
I’m very happy for Kaz Allen. I was hoping that that he would be another D. Felton and he has made a similar impact. His TD was a thing of beauty…I watched that play over and over a again.
DTR is playing hurt. CCK should hold him out for the ASU and Arizona or at least minimize his PT.
Charbonne is a beast. He looks like a First Round draft choice.
David Shaw made a good run but I think it’s time to step down. I was a bit sad because this is the last time I will see Stanford at the RB. That chapter is closed forever. I think of Stanford I think of Jim Plunkett, Elway, McCaffrey, etc
Your thoughts

In-game commitment!

Login to view embedded media

The Bruins are still playing, but the team has picked up a commitment during the game. It's been a while since I've seen one of these, but it's an important one for UCLA. Hawaii-based 2023 linebacker Solomon Malafu has announced his commitment to the Bruins during tonight's game. He took an official visit to UCLA back in the spring and the program has been the leader in the clubhouse with him, but Cal had made a strong push plus he had options at other schools as well including Utah, Nebraska, Boise State and his in-state school, Hawaii.

Instead, he's the second 2023 prospect to announce his commitment to the Bruins this weekend.

He could play either linebacker spot, so it will be interesting to see where the UCLA staff ultimately decides to use him.

Login to view embedded media
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT