Current:Home > InvestLt. Gen. Richard Clark brings leadership, diplomacy skills to CFP as it expands, evolves -Zenith Investment School
Lt. Gen. Richard Clark brings leadership, diplomacy skills to CFP as it expands, evolves
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:55:49
The College Football Playoff is on the verge of expanding, in the process of searching for its next set of media partners for what is expected to be a multibillion-dollar deal and possibly evolving into an organizing body in college sports.
All that will happen while breaking in a new leader.
Lt. Gen. Richard Clark was hired last week to become the CFP’s second executive director, replacing the retiring Bill Hancock. Clark, who is currently the superintendent of the Air Force Academy, officially starts his new job in June. He was a former Air Force football player and has had a 38-year military career.
“The No. 1 thing that I heard from the (search) committee was that they needed leadership, like they’ve gotten from Mr. Hancock over the years,” Clark said Monday during a 30-minute teleconference. “They want to continue that and they want me to not just be a leader in the day-to-day operations, but a strategic leader that not only helps develop the vision and where college football can go, but to help execute that vision once we have it.”
Hancock said he expects to stay on through much of 2024 in an advisory role to help with the transition.
The next year is a big one for the playoff, the first that will include a 12-team field. The final four-team CFP will be held this season. Most of the planning for that is either underway or complete.
That transition from four to 12 was more difficult than anticipated. Mistrust and misaligned priorities among the conference commissioners who manage the CFP — triggered by realignment — along with leadership turnover in some leagues, snarled the expansion process.
The new format could have been in place a year earlier if not for the commissioners being unable to reach consensus.
Hancock’s role has been overseeing and managing the event and acting as a facilitator when it came time for the commissioners to work through details and disagreements.
A Board of Managers, made up of university presidents, has the final say over anything playoff related.
The decision-making structure is unlikely to change, but the role of the executive director could evolve, too.
Mississippi State President Mark Keenum, the chairman of the Board of Managers, cited Clark’s leadership several times and called him a diplomat.
“Among the many aircraft that he has piloted in his career, he piloted the B-1 bomber, and given some of the issues in college football, you may never know when that might come in handy,” Keenum said.
The next big item on the table for the College Football Playoff is negotiating a new television deal. The current deal with ESPN expires after the 2025 season and is worth about $470 million per year to the conferences and schools that compete at the top-tier of major college football.
Playoff expansion means the last two years of the deal will have to be re-worked. Hancock has said ESPN gets first crack at the new inventory for 2024 and ’25.
After that, everyone associated with the CFP has said they would like to have multiple television partners for the event. The value of the deal is expected to more than double.
The commissioners and Hancock have been meeting with potential future partners, drawing interests from all the traditional networks and some streaming platforms.
Clark said he does not have experience negotiating media rights deals, but with Hancock staying on board through next year that might not be an issue.
The playoff is a small part of the changes coming to major college football.
College sports leaders are asking for help from Congress with managing the way athletes are compensated for their fame and in fighting off legal threats that could turn at least some athletes — like those who play major college football — into employees of their schools who share in the revenue their sports generate.
Also, major conference realignment moves kick in next year with the Big Ten, Big 12, Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference all expanding and the Pac-12 contracting.
The CFP is not a governing body, but as an organization comprised of the 11 major college football conferences, it could be an entity where some of the biggest issues with college sports are addressed.
“Some of those decisions are decisions that I will be working very closely with all the stakeholders who are involved in that growth, which is one of the skills I think I’ve developed over the years as a person who collaborates and really helps to pull a team together to move forward with big decisions like this,” Clark said.
___
Follow Ralph D. Russo at https://twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP and listen at http://www.appodcasts.com.
___
Get alerts on the latest AP Top 25 poll throughout the season. Sign up here
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
veryGood! (5)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Purdue's Matt Painter has been one of best coaches of his generation win or lose vs. UConn
- Larry David says he talks to Richard Lewis after comic's death: 'I feel he's watching me'
- Elon Musk will be investigated over fake news and obstruction in Brazil after a Supreme Court order
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Air Force contractor who walked into moving propeller had 'inadequate training' when killed
- Solar eclipse 2024 live updates: See latest weather forecast, what time it hits your area
- Purdue student, 22, is dying. Inside a hospital room, he got Final Four for the ages
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Ohio state lawmaker’s hostile behavior justified legislative punishments, report concludes
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- More proof Tiger Woods is playing in 2024 Masters: He was practicing at Augusta
- British man claims the crown of the world's oldest man at age 111
- Justice Department blasts GOP effort to hold Attorney General Garland in contempt over Biden audio
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- An engine cover on a Southwest Airlines plane rips off, forcing the flight to return to Denver
- As a Mississippi town reels from a devastating tornado, a displaced family finds its way home
- Foster children deprived of benefits: How a loophole affects the most vulnerable
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
'Just married!': Don Lemon, Tim Malone share wedding pics
How South Carolina's Dawn Staley forged her championship legacy after heartbreak of 1991
2 dead after car crash with a Washington State Patrol trooper, authorities say
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
When does Purdue and UConn play in March Madness? Breaking down the NCAA Tournament title game
James Patterson and joyful librarian Mychal Threets talk new librarians and book bans
The Rock, John Cena, Undertaker bring beautiful bedlam to end of WrestleMania 40