Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox sports league

The Big 12 Conference is a collegiate athletic conference in the United States. It consists of 16 full-member universities (3 private universities and 13 public universities) in the states of Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia. It is headquartered in Irving, Texas.

The Big 12 is a member of the Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for all sports. Its football teams compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A), the higher of two levels of NCAA Division I football competition.

The Big 12 is one of the Power Four conferences, the four highest-earning and most historically successful FBS football conferences. Power Four conferences are guaranteed at least one bid to a New Year's Six bowl game and have been granted exemptions from certain NCAA rules.

The Big 12 is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.<ref>"Big Twelve Conference Inc". Exempt Organizations Select Check. Internal Revenue Service. Retrieved June 17, 2016.
- Division of Corporations, Delaware Department of State. Retrieved June 17, 2016.</ref> Brett Yormark became the commissioner on August 1, 2022.

The Big 12 was founded in February 1994. All eight members of the former Big Eight Conference joined with half the members of the former Southwest Conference (Baylor, Texas, Texas A&M, and Texas Tech) to form the conference, with play beginning in 1996.<ref name="si.com">Template:Cite magazine
- Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2011, Colorado and Nebraska left the conference to join the Pac-12 and Big Ten, respectively. One year later, Missouri and Texas A&M departed for the Southeastern Conference, and TCU and West Virginia joined.

BYU, Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF joined the conference for the 2023–2024 season.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The next season Arizona, Arizona State,and Utah joined the conference, Colorado rejoined, and Texas and Oklahoma left as part of a more extensive NCAA conference realignment.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Member universitiesEdit

Full membersEdit

Institution Location Founded Joined Type Enrollment
(fall 2023)<ref name=CollegeNavigator>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Endowment
Template:Nowrap
Nickname Colors
University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona 1885 2024 Public 53,001 $1.387 Wildcats Template:College color boxes
Arizona State University Tempe, ArizonaTemplate:Efn 79,593Template:Efn $1.592 Sun Devils Template:College color boxes
Baylor University Waco, Texas 1845 1996 Private
(Baptist)
20,824 $2.094 Bears Template:College color boxes
Brigham Young University Provo, Utah 1875 2023 Private
(LDS)
35,074 citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Cougars Template:College color boxes
University of Central Florida Orlando, FloridaTemplate:Efn 1963 Public 69,233 $0.255 Knights Template:College color boxes
University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio 1819 43,338 citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Bearcats Template:College color boxes
University of Colorado Boulder Boulder, Colorado 1876 Template:Sort 41,432 $2.245
(system-wide)
Buffaloes Template:College color boxes
University of Houston Houston, Texas 1927 2023 46,676 citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>
(system-wide)

Cougars Template:College color boxes
Iowa State University Ames, Iowa 1858 1996 30,177 $1.717 Cyclones Template:College color boxes
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 1865 28,406 $2.525 Jayhawks Template:College color boxes
Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas 1863 19,745 $0.849 Wildcats Template:College color boxes
Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 1890 26,043 $1.482
(system-wide)
Cowboys / Cowgirls Template:College color boxes
Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas 1873 2012 Private
(DOC)
12,785 $2.676 Horned Frogs Template:College color boxes
Texas Tech University Lubbock, Texas 1923 1996 Public 40,773 $2.904
(system-wide)
Red Raiders Template:College color boxes
University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah 1850 2024 35,260 $1.860 Utes Template:College color boxes
West Virginia University Morgantown, West Virginia 1867 2012 24,200 $0.865 Mountaineers Template:College color boxes
Notes

Template:Notelist

Membership mapEdit

Template:OSM Location map

Template:OSM Location map

Affiliate membersEdit

Institution City State Founded JoinedTemplate:Efn Type Enrollment
(fall 2023)<ref name=CollegeNavigator/>
Nickname Colors Big 12
sport
Primary
conference
United States Air Force Academy USAF AcademyTemplate:Efn Colorado 1954 2015 Military academy 4,124 Falcons Template:College color boxes Wrestling Mountain West
California Baptist University Riverside California 1950 2022 Private 11,407 Lancers Template:College color boxes Wrestling WAC
Template:Small
University of Denver Denver Colorado 1864 2015 13,387 Pioneers Template:College color boxes Women's gymnastics Summit
University of Florida Gainesville Florida 1853 2024 Public 54,814 Gators Template:College color boxes Women's lacrosse SEC
California State University, Fresno Fresno California 1911 2019 23,986 Bulldogs Template:College color boxes Equestrian Mountain West
Template:Small
University of Missouri Columbia Missouri 1839 2021Template:Efn 31,013 Tigers Template:College color boxes Wrestling SEC
Template:Sort Greeley Colorado 1889 2015 9,067 Bears Template:College color boxes Big Sky
University of Northern Iowa Cedar Falls Iowa 1876 2017 9,013 Panthers Template:College color boxes Missouri Valley
North Dakota State University Fargo North Dakota 1890 2015 11,952 Bison Template:College color boxes Summit
University of Oklahoma Norman Oklahoma 1890 2024Template:Efn 29,145 Sooners Template:College color boxes SEC
Old Dominion University Norfolk Virginia 1930 2024Template:Efn 22,541 Monarchs Template:College color boxes Women's rowing Sun Belt
San Diego State University San Diego California 1897 2024 39,241 Aztecs Template:College color boxes Women's lacrosse Mountain West
Template:Small
South Dakota State University Brookings South Dakota 1881 2015 11,498 Jackrabbits Template:College color boxes Wrestling Summit
University of Tulsa Tulsa Oklahoma 1894 2024 Private 3,559 Golden Hurricane Template:College color boxes Women's rowing American
University of California, Davis Davis California 1908 2024 Public 39,707 Aggies Template:College color boxes Women's lacrosse Big West
Template:Small
Utah Valley University Orem Utah 1941 2015 44,651 Wolverines Template:College color boxes Wrestling WAC
University of Wyoming Laramie Wyoming 1886 2015 10,913 Cowboys Template:College color boxes Mountain West
Notes

Template:Notelist

  • On July 29, 2015, the Big 12 announced it would add the six former members of the Western Wrestling Conference—Air Force, Northern Colorado, North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Utah Valley, and Wyoming—as affiliate members for wrestling, plus Denver as an affiliate member for women's gymnastics, all effective with the 2015–16 academic year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • On July 5, 2017, the Big 12 added Fresno State and Northern Iowa as wrestling affiliates.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>
  • On May 2, 2019, the Big 12 added Fresno State as an equestrian affiliate.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Fresno State would drop wrestling in 2021, but remains an equestrian affiliate.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

Former full membersEdit

Institution City State Founded Joined Left Type Nickname Colors Current
conference
University of Missouri Columbia MO 1839 1996 2012Template:Efn Public Tigers Template:College color boxes SEC
University of Nebraska–Lincoln Lincoln NE 1869 1996 2011 Public Cornhuskers Template:College color boxes Big Ten
University of Oklahoma Norman OK 1890 1996 2024Template:Efn Public Sooners Template:College color boxes SEC
University of Texas at Austin Austin TX 1883 1996 2024 Public Longhorns Template:College color boxes SEC
Texas A&M University College Station TX 1876 1996 2012 Public Aggies Template:College color boxes SEC
Notes

Template:Notelist

Former affiliate membersEdit

Institution City State Founded Joined Left Type Nickname Colors Big 12
sport(s)
Current
primary
conference
Current
conference
in former
Big 12
sport(s)Template:Efn
University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama 1831 2014 2024 Public Crimson Tide Template:College color boxes Women's rowing SEC
California State University, Fresno Fresno California 1911 2017 2021Template:Efn Bulldogs Template:College color boxes Wrestling Mountain West
Template:Small
Template:Sort (dropped wrestling)
University of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee 1794 2014 2024 Volunteers Template:College color boxes Women's rowing SEC
Notes

Template:Notelist

Membership timelineEdit

<timeline>

DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy

Define $now = 07/01/2010

ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20

Period = from:01/01/1995 till:01/01/2030

TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal

PlotArea = right:20 left:0 bottom:50 top:5 #> to display a count on left side of graph, use "left:20" to suppress the count, use "left:20"<#

Colors = id:barcolor value:rgb(0.99,0.7,0.7)

         id:line      value:black
         id:lightline value:rgb(0.5,0.5,0.5)
         id:bg        value:white
         id:FMBig8 value:rgb(0.250,0.800,0.999) # Use this color to denote a Founding Members from the Big 8
         id:FMSWC  value:rgb(0.999,0.500,0.500) # Use this color to denote a Founding Members from the SWC
         id:Full   value:rgb(0.742,0.727,0.852) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports
         id:FullxF value:rgb(0.551,0.824,0.777) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports except for football
         id:AssocF value:rgb(0.98,0.5,0.445) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member for football only
         id:AssocOS value:rgb(0.5,0.6,0.824) # Use this color to denote a team that is an affiliate member for only one sport which is not football
         id:OtherC1 value:rgb(0.996,0.996,0.699) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference
         id:OtherC2 value:rgb(0.988,0.703,0.383) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved to another conference where OtherC1 has already been used, to distinguish the two

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  bar:1 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:1 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:07/01/2011 text:Nebraska (1996–2011)
  bar:1 color:OtherC1 from:06/30/2011 till:end text:Big Ten
  bar:2 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:2 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Missouri (1996–2012)
  bar:2 color:OtherC1 from:06/30/2012 till:06/30/2021 text:SEC
  bar:2 color:AssocOS from:06/30/2021 till:end text:SEC (wrestling 2021-present)
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  bar:3 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:06/30/2025 text:Oklahoma (1996–2024)
  bar:3 color:AssocOS from:07/01/2024 till:end text:SEC (wrestling 2024-present)
  bar:4 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:4 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:06/30/2011 text:Colorado (1996–2011)
  bar:4 color:OtherC1 from:06/30/2011 till:06/30/2024 text:Pac-12
  bar:4 color:Full    from:06/30/2024 till:end text:(2024–present)
  bar:5 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:5 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Iowa State (1996–present)
  bar:6 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:6 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Kansas (1996–present)
  bar:7 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:7 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Kansas State (1996–present)
  bar:8 color:FMBig8 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:Big8
  bar:8 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Oklahoma State (1996–present)
  bar:9 color:FMSWC   from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:9 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Texas A&M (1996–2012)
  bar:9 color:OtherC1 from:06/30/2012 till:end text:SEC
  bar:10 color:FMSWC   from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:10 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:06/30/2025 text:Texas (1996–2024)
  bar:10 color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2024 till:end text:SEC
  bar:11 color:FMSWC   from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:11 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Baylor (1996-present)
  bar:12 color:FMSWC   from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:12 color:Full    from:08/31/1996 till:end text:Texas Tech (1996–present)
  bar:13 color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:13 color:OtherC2 from:08/31/1996 till:06/30/2001 text:WAC
  bar:13 color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2001 till:06/30/2005 text:C-USA
  bar:13 color:OtherC2 from:07/01/2005 till:06/30/2012 text:Mountain West
  bar:13 color:Full from:07/01/2012 till:end text:TCU (2012–present)
  bar:14  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:06/30/2012 text:Big East
  bar:14  color:Full from:07/01/2012 till:end text:West Virginia (2012–present)
  bar:15  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:01/03/1999 text:WAC
  bar:15  color:OtherC2 from:01/04/1999 till:06/30/2011 text:Mountain West
  bar:15  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2011 till:06/30/2023 text:West Coast (FB Independent)
  bar:15  color:Full from:07/01/2023 till:end text:BYU (2023–present)
  bar:16  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:06/30/2005 text: C-USA
  bar:16  color:OtherC2 from:07/01/2005 till:06/30/2012 text:Big East
  bar:16  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2012 till:06/30/2023 text: The American
  bar:16  color:Full from:07/01/2023 till:end text:Cincinnati (2023–present)
  bar:17 color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:08/31/1996 text:SWC
  bar:17 color:OtherC2 from:08/31/1996 till:06/30/2012 text: C-USA
  bar:17 color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2012 till:06/30/2023 text: The American
  bar:17 color:Full from:07/01/2023 till:end text:Houston (2023–present)
  bar:18  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:06/30/2005 text:TAAC/A-Sun                        MAC (FB only 2002-2005)
  bar:18  color:OtherC2 from:07/01/2005 till:06/30/2012 text:C-USA
  bar:18  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2012 till:06/30/2023 text: The American
  bar:18  color:Full from:07/01/2023 till:end text:UCF (2023–present)
  bar:19  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:06/30/2011 text:Pac-10
  bar:19  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2011 till:06/30/2024 text:Pac-12
  bar:19  color:Full from:07/01/2024 till:end text:Arizona (2024–present)
  bar:20  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:06/30/2011 text:Pac-10
  bar:20  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2011 till:06/30/2024 text:Pac-12
  bar:20  color:Full from:07/01/2024 till:end text:Arizona State (2024–present)
  bar:21  color:OtherC1 from:01/01/1995 till:01/03/1999 text:WAC
  bar:21  color:OtherC2 from:01/04/1999 till:06/30/2011 text:Mountain West
  bar:21  color:OtherC1 from:07/01/2011 till:06/30/2024 text:Pac-12
  bar:21  color:Full from:07/01/2024 till:end text:Utah (2024–present)

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Template:Font color
Template:Font color
Template:Font color
Template:Font color
Template:Font color
Template:Font color

Earlier Membership timelinesEdit

Click here for the Big Eight Conference Timeline which predates the Big 12 timeline for founding members:

Click here for the Southwest Conference Timeline which predates the Big 12 timeline for founding members:

Current members with the longest continuous association with the Big Eight Conference / Southwest Conference / Big 12 Conference.

Institution Started Current
Association In
Continuous
Years
Note
Kansas 1907 Template:Years ago
Iowa State 1908 Template:Years ago
Kansas State 1913 Template:Years ago
Baylor 1915 Template:Years ago
Texas Tech 1956 Template:Years ago
Oklahoma State 1958 Template:Years ago Previously: 10 years in the Southwest Conference (1914–1924);
3 years in the MVIAA (1924–1927)
TCU 2012 Template:Years ago Previously: 73 years in the Southwest Conference (1923–1996)
West Virginia 2012 Template:Years ago
BYU 2023 Template:Years ago
UCF 2023 Template:Years ago
Cincinnati 2023 Template:Years ago
Houston 2023 Template:Years ago Previously: 20 years in the Southwest Conference (1976–1996)
Arizona 2024 Template:Years ago
Arizona State 2024 Template:Years ago
Utah 2024 Template:Years ago
Colorado 2024 Template:Years ago Previously: 49 years in the Big Eight Conference (1947–1996)
and 15 years in the Big 12 Conference (1996–2011)

SportsEdit

The Big 12 Conference sponsors championship competition in 10 men's and 15 women's NCAA sanctioned sports.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Teams in Big 12 Conference competition
Sport Men's Women's
Baseball 14
Basketball 16 16
Beach volleyball 4
Cross country 13 16
Equestrian 4
Football 16
Golf 16 14
Gymnastics 7
Lacrosse 6
Rowing 6
Soccer 16
Softball 11
Swimming & Diving 7 10
Tennis 9 16
Track and Field (Indoor) 13 16
Track and Field (Outdoor) 13 16
Volleyball 15
Wrestling 14

Current championsEdit

Source:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Season Sport Men's
champion
Women's
champion
Fall 2024 Cross Country BYU BYU
Football Arizona State
Soccer Kansas
Volleyball Arizona State
Winter 2024–25 Basketball Houston TCU
Equestrian Oklahoma State
Gymnastics Utah
Indoor Track & Field Texas Tech Texas Tech
Swimming & Diving Arizona State Arizona State
Wrestling Oklahoma State
Spring 2025 Baseball Arizona
Beach Volleyball TCU
Lacrosse Florida
Golf Oklahoma State Arizona
Outdoor Track & Field Texas Tech Texas Tech
Rowing UCF
Softball Texas Tech
Tennis Arizona Texas Tech

Template:Notelist

Men's sponsored sports by universityEdit

Below are the men's sports sponsored by each member institution.

The only men's sports with full participation by the entire conference are basketball, football, and golf. Swimming and diving has the lowest participation with only seven universities fielding a team.

The Big 12 fields 14 teams for wrestling. Before the conference's 2023 expansion, it had the most competing schools of any Big 12 sport, with 13 members at that time. The 2022–23 and 2024–25 wrestling lineups both included only 4 full conference members; all remaining wrestling schools were affiliate members (listed as a footnote at the bottom of the table).

University Baseball Basketball Cross
Country
Football Golf Swimming
&
Diving
Tennis Track
&
Field
Indoor
Track
&
Field
Outdoor
Wrestling Total
Big 12
Sports
Arizona Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 9
Arizona State Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Baylor Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 8
BYU Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 9
Cincinnati Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 8
Colorado Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 6
Houston Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 7
Iowa State Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 7
Kansas Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 7
Kansas State Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 7
Oklahoma State Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 9
TCU Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 9
Texas Tech Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 8
UCF Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No 5
Utah Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No 5
West Virginia Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes 6
Current
totals
14 16 13 16 16 7 9 13 13 4+10Template:Efn

Template:Notelist Template:Reflist

Men's (and Coed – see Rifle) varsity sports not sponsored by the Big 12 Conference which are played by Big 12 universities:

Schools Participating in Men's Non-Sponsored Sports
University Ice Hockey Lacrosse RifleTemplate:Efn Skiing Soccer Volleyball
Arizona State NCHC Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No
BYU Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No MPSF
Colorado Template:No Template:No Template:No RMISA Template:No Template:No
TCU Template:No Template:No PRC Template:No Template:No Template:No
UCF Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No SBC Template:No
Utah Template:No ASUN Template:No RMISA Template:No Template:No
West Virginia Template:No Template:No GARC Template:No SBC Template:No

Template:Notelist

Women's sponsored sports by universityEdit

Below are the women's sports sponsored by each member institution.

The only women's sports with full participation by the entire conference are basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, indoor track and outdoor track. Oklahoma State is the only member that does not sponsor volleyball, and only Utah and West Virginia do not sponsor golf.

Beach volleyball (4 full members) and equestrian (3 full members, 1 affiliate) have the lowest participation, each with 4 total members. With Utah dropping beach volleyball after the spring 2025 season,<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> future Big 12 sponsorship of beach volleyball is uncertain. Lacrosse (3 full members, 3 affiliates) and rowing (4 full members, 2 affiliates) follow with 6 total members. The affiliate members are listed as footnotes at the bottom of the table, beneath their respective sport.

Full Members
University Basketball Beach
Volleyball
Cross
Country
Equestrian Golf Gymnastics Lacrosse Rowing Soccer Softball Swimming
&
Diving
Tennis Track
&
Field
Indoor
Track
&
Field
Outdoor
Volleyball Total
Big 12
Sports
Arizona Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 11
Arizona State Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 13
Baylor Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
BYU Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 11
Cincinnati Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Colorado Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Houston Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Iowa State Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 11
Kansas Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 11
Kansas State Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 9
Oklahoma State Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No 9
TCU Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 11
Texas Tech Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 9
UCF Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Utah Template:Yes Template:YesTemplate:Efn Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
West Virginia Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes 10
Current
totals
16 4 16 3+1Template:Efn 14 6+1Template:Efn 3+3Template:Efn 4+2Template:Efn 16 11 10 16 16 16 15

Template:Notelist

Women's (and co-educational – see Rifle) varsity sports not sponsored by the Big 12 Conference which are played by Big 12 universities:

Schools Participating in Women's Non-Sponsored Sports
University Acrobatics & tumblingTemplate:Efn RifleTemplate:Efn Skiing TriathlonTemplate:Efn Water Polo
Arizona Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes Template:No
Arizona State Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:Yes MPSF
Baylor Template:Abbr Template:No Template:No Template:No Template:No
Colorado Template:No Template:No RMISA Template:No Template:No
TCU Template:No PRC Template:No Template:Yes Template:No
Utah Template:No Template:No RMISA Template:No Template:No
West Virginia Template:No GARC Template:No Template:No Template:No

Template:Notelist

  • In addition to the above, UCF lists its coeducational cheerleading and all-female dance teams as varsity teams on its official athletic website.

HistoryEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also

The Big 12 Conference was founded in February 1994. All eight members of the former Big Eight Conference joined with half the members of the former Southwest Conference (Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor and Texas Tech) to form the conference, with play beginning in 1996.<ref name="si.com"/>

The Big 12 does not claim the Big Eight's history as its own, even though it was essentially the Big Eight plus four of the Texas universities.

The Big 12 began athletic play in fall 1996, with the Texas Tech vs. Kansas State football game being the first-ever sports event staged by the conference.

From its formation until 2011, its 12 members competed in two divisions in most sports. The two Oklahoma universities and the four Texas universities formed the South Division, while the other six universities of the former Big Eight formed the North Division.

Between 2011 and 2012 four charter members left the conference:

In 2012, two universities joined the conference:

On July 26, 2021, Oklahoma and Texas notified the Big 12 Conference that the two universities did not wish to extend their grant of television rights beyond the 2024–25 athletic year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On July 27, 2021, Oklahoma and Texas sent a joint letter to the Southeastern Conference requesting an invitation for membership beginning July 1, 2025.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On July 29, 2021, the 14 presidents and chancellors of SEC member universities voted unanimously to invite Oklahoma and Texas to join the SEC.<ref name= Dinich>Dinich, Heather (July 29, 2021). "SEC unanimously votes to invite Texas, Oklahoma to join conference". ESPN.</ref> The following day, the Texas Board of Regents and Oklahoma Board of Regents each accepted the invitation to join the SEC from July 1, 2025.<ref name=UTOUaccept>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

On September 10, 2021, the Big 12 announced that invitations had been extended to and accepted by BYU (a football independent and member of the non-football West Coast Conference) and three members of the American Athletic Conference in Cincinnati, UCF, and Houston. These moves, combined with the impending departure of Oklahoma and Texas, would once again increase the Big 12's membership to twelve schools.<ref name="invitation">Template:Cite press release</ref> All four schools began competing in Big 12 athletics beginning in summer of 2023. BYU had initially announced that it would join in 2023,<ref name="byujoins">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Houston indicated it could do so as well.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On June 10, 2022, The American and its three departing members announced a buyout agreement that allowed those schools to join the Big 12 in 2023.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

On February 9, 2023, Oklahoma and Texas announced they had reached a settlement with the conference that allowed them to join the SEC on July 1, 2024.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

On July 27, 2023, Colorado, a former member of the Big 12, announced it would rejoin the conference from the Pac-12 beginning in the 2024–25 academic year. The following week, Arizona, Arizona State, and Utah announced they would leave the Pac-12 for the Big 12, also effective for the 2024–25 academic year.

Distinctive elementsEdit

Template:Multiple image

Population base and marketsEdit

The largest media markets represented by the Big 12 are, ranked nationally:

Although West Virginia University is based out of Morgantown, West Virginia (officially part of the Pittsburgh (26th) media market), the TV market encompasses the majority of West Virginia's TV viewership and also reaches well into Western Pennsylvania.

Kansas State University is in Manhattan, Kansas, which is part of the Topeka, Kansas media market, but it is close to the Wichita market, which encompasses two-thirds of the state (stretching to the border with Colorado), including the cities of Dodge City, Garden City, Hutchinson and Salina.

While the University of Kansas is in Lawrence, Kansas, it has close proximity to the Kansas City television market, increasing the base into western Missouri.

Template:Table alignment

State Population<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Universities
Arizona 7,431,344 * University of Arizona

* Arizona State University

Colorado 5,773,714 * University of Colorado Boulder
Florida 22,610,726 * University of Central Florida
Iowa 3,207,004 * Iowa State University
Kansas 2,940,546 * University of Kansas
* Kansas State University
Ohio 11,785,935 * University of Cincinnati
Oklahoma 4,053,824 * Oklahoma State University
Texas 30,503,301 * Baylor University
* University of Houston
* Texas Christian University
* Texas Tech University
Utah 3,417,734 * Brigham Young University

* University of Utah

West Virginia 1,770,071 * West Virginia University
Total 93,494,199

Grant of RightsEdit

Member universities granted their first and second tier sports media rights to the conference for the length of their current TV deals. The Grant of Rights (GOR) deal with the leagues' TV contracts ensures that "if a Big 12 school leaves for another league in the next 13 years, that school's media rights, including revenue, would remain with the Big 12 and not its new conference".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

GOR is seen by league members as a "foundation of stability" and allowed the Big 12 to be "positioned with one of the best media rights arrangements in collegiate sports, providing the conference and its members unprecedented revenue growth, and sports programming over two networks." All members agreed to the GOR and later agreed to extend the initial 6-year deal to 13 years to correspond to the length of their TV contracts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Prior to this agreement, the Big Ten and Pac-12 also had similar GOR agreements.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Big 12 subsequently assisted the ACC in drafting its GOR agreement.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Three of the four major conferences now have such agreements, with the SEC the only exception.

Tier 3 eventsEdit

The Big 12 is the only major conference that allows members to monetize TV rights for tier 3 events in football and men's basketball.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This allows individual Big 12 member institutions to create tier 3 deals that include TV rights for one home football game and four home men's basketball games per season. Tier 3 rights exist for other sports as well, but these are not unique to the Big 12. The unique arrangement potentially allows Big 12 members to remain some of college sports' highest revenue earners. Other conferences' cable deals are subject to value reductions based on how people acquire cable programming; Big 12 universities' tier 3 deals are exempt.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Texas alone earned more than $150 million of that total from their Longhorn Network before it was shut down with its move to the SEC.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As of 2022, all of the Big 12's tier 3 rights are held by ESPN; it bought the tier 3 rights to most Big 12 teams (besides Oklahoma) in 2019, moving the events exclusively to ESPN+.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Oklahoma Sooners retained an agreement with Bally Sports Oklahoma (which distributed its football game via pay-per-view) until 2022, when it also sold its rights to ESPN+. Prior to its departure to the SEC, ESPN also ran a dedicated cable network for the Texas Longhorns known as Longhorn Network, as a joint venture between the university and Learfield.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Business partnerships and innovationEdit

The Big 12 has a sponsorship rights partnership with Learfield IMG College.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Big 12 announced on September 9, 2022, that it appointed WME Sports and IMG Media, Endeavor companies, to facilitate its global content and commercial strategy. Commissioner Brett Yormark stated "We have aligned with a best-in-class team to build a best-in-class business strategy for the Conference".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> November 14, 2022 Big 12 formed a comprehensive business advisor board composed of over three dozen entrepreneurial icons and respective industry leaders. From the likes of Monte Lipman the Founder/CEO Republic Records, Steve Stoute Founder/CEO UnitedMasters & Translation, Mark Shapiro President of Endeavor, Gary Vaynerchuk’s VaynerMedia, singer Garth Brooks, NBA legend Jason Kidd, Keith Sheldon President of Entertainment for Hard Rock Cafe International, and Ross Levinsohn Chairman and CEO - The Arena Group & Sports Illustrated.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Big 12 partnered with creative agency Translation to help build a more contemporary audience and brand.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Soon after Big 12 Conference made a deal with A Bathing Ape (BAPE) for Championship games. The Conference and BAPE worked together to create limited-edition clothing and a camouflaged Big 12 logo throughout the stadium, arena, and uniforms.

The Big 12 has 11 official corporate partners: Allstate, Children’s Health, Dr Pepper, Gatorade, Grand Caliber, Old Trapper, On Location, Phillips 66, Sonic Hard Seltzer, Sprouts Farmers Market, and Tickets For Less. There are dozens of other companies engaged as sponsors of the conference.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Conference Pro DayEdit

On March 15, 2023, before the NFL Draft, the Big 12 announced the first of its kind across all college conferences, being a conference-wide Pro Day. Instead of schools hosting separate pro days for their football players, there will be only one conference-wide scouting event before the 2024 NFL draft. The event will be held at the Dallas Cowboys training complex, Ford Center at The Star. What essentially would be a conference version of the NFL combine, the Pro Day would be televised on NFL Network.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Hoops in the ParkEdit

In March, the Big 12 Conference announced a partnership with the legendary Rucker Park for a community engagement event. In June the event was officially announced as "Big 12 Hoops in the Park", to host men's and women's summer exhibition games. Throughout the event, the Big 12 is also preparing a number of entertainment activities and community engagements. The activities include youth clinics, meet-and-greets, live music, and food.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

MexicoEdit

Early June 2023, the "Big 12 Mexico" initiative was announced, which includes men's and women's soccer, baseball, basketball, and football games and an international media rights strategy. Big 12 Mexico debuted in December 2024 with men's and women's basketball games between Kansas and Houston at Arena CDMX in Mexico City. The Big 12 will also consider hosting a football bowl game in Monterrey beginning in 2026. This would be the first-ever bowl game in Mexico.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Conference annual revenue distributionEdit

Year Total distributed Annual increase Average per universitya
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $53.6 million|| –|| $4.5 million

1998<ref name="big12cash1" /> $58 million 8.2% $4.8 million
1999<ref name="big12cash1" /> $64 million 10.3% $5.3 million
2000<ref name="big12cash1" /> $72 million 12.5% $6.0 million
2001<ref name="big12cash1" /> $78 million 8.3% $6.5 million
2002<ref name="big12cash1" /> $83.5 million 7.1% $7.0 million
2003<ref name="big12cash1" /> $89 million 6.6% $7.4 million
2004<ref name="big12cash1" /> $101 million 13.5% $8.4 million
2005<ref name="big12cash1" /> $105.6 million 4.6% $8.8 million
2006<ref name="big12cash1" /> $103.1 million −2.4% $8.6 million
2007<ref name="big12cash1" /> $106 million 2.8% $8.8 million
2008<ref name="big12cash1" /> $113.5 million 7.1% $9.5 million
2009<ref name="big12cash1" /> $130 million 14.5% $10.8 million
2010<ref name="big12cash1" /> $139 million 6.9% $11.6 million
2011<ref name="big12cash2">Template:Cite AV media</ref> $145 million 4.3% $12.1 million
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $187 million|| 29.0%|| $18.7 million

2013<ref name="big12cash3" /> $198 million 5.9% $19.8 million
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $212 million|| 7.1%|| $21.2 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $252 million|| 18.9%|| $25.2 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $304 million|| 20.6%|| $30.4 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $348 million|| 14.5%|| $34.8 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $364 million|| 4.9%|| $36.5 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $388 million|| 6.3%|| $38.8 million

2020<ref name="espn.com"/> $377 million -2.8% $37.7 million
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $345 million|| -8.5%|| $34.5 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $426 million|| 23.5%|| $42.6 million

citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>|| $470 million|| 10.3%|| $39.8 million†
$18.0 million‡

a Twelve Big 12 members received disbursements each year from 1997 to 2011; ten each year afterwards. Individual universities' disbursement varied annually according to bylaw rules and entrance or withdrawal agreements.
†legacy 10-member institutions.
‡Four new coming institutions(UCF, BYU, UC & UH).

Conference revenue comes mostly from television contracts, bowl games, the NCAA, merchandise, licensing and conference-hosted sporting events. The Conference distributes revenue annually to member institutions.<ref name="espnrevenue">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> From 1996 to 2011, 57 percent of revenue was allotted equally; while 43 percent was based upon the number of football and men's basketball television appearances and other factors.<ref name="revenue">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2011, the distribution was 76 percent equal and 24 percent based on television appearances. Changing the arrangement requires a unanimous vote; as a Big 12 member, Nebraska and Texas A&M had withheld support for more equitable revenue distribution.<ref name="revenue" />

With this model, larger universities can receive more revenue because they appear more often on television. In 2006, for example, Texas received $10.2 million, 44% more than Baylor University's $7.1 million.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Big 12 revenue was generally less than other BCS conferences; this was due in part to television contracts signed with Fox Sports Net (four years for $48 million) and ABC/ESPN (eight years for $480 million).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2011, the Big 12 announced a new 13-year media rights deal with Fox that would ensure that every Big 12 home football game is televised, as well as greatly increasing coverage of women's basketball, conference championships and other sports.<ref name="fox2011">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The deal, valued at an estimated $1.1 billion, runs until 2025.<ref name="fox2011value">Template:Cite news</ref> In 2012, the conference announced a new agreement with Fox and ESPN, replacing the current ABC/ESPN deal, to immediately increase national media broadcasts of football and increase conference revenue;<ref name="espn2012">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the new deal was estimated to be worth $2.6 billion through the 2025 expiration.<ref name="espn2012value">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The two deals pushed the conference per-university payout to approximately $20 million per year, while separating third-tier media rights into separate deals for each university; such contracts secured an additional $6 million to $20 million per university annually.<ref name="forbes12">Template:Cite news</ref> The per-university payout under the deal is expected to reach $44 million, according to Commissioner Bob Bowlsby.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>

In 2022, the conference renewed its media rights with ESPN and Fox Sports for six seasons starting in 2025–26, with an estimated US$380 million average annual fee.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Athletic department revenue by schoolEdit

Total revenue includes ticket sales, contributions and donations, rights and licensing, student fees, school funds and all other sources including TV income, camp income, concessions, and novelties.

Total expenses includes coach and staff salaries, scholarships, buildings and grounds, maintenance, utilities and rental fees, recruiting, team travel, equipment and uniforms, conference dues, and insurance.

The following table shows institutional reporting to the United States Department of Education as shown on the DOE Equity in Athletics website for the 2022–23 academic year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Institution 2022–23 Total Revenue from Athletics 2022–23 Total Expenses on Athletics
Texas Christian University $149,297,918 $149,297,918
University of Kansas $205,747,275Template:Efn $139,748,616
University of Arizona $138,761,638 $136,866,623
Baylor University $137,460,582 $137,460,582
University of Colorado Boulder $136,114,468 $136,114,468
Arizona State University $128,265,591 $128,265,591
Texas Tech University $123,551,688 $113,108,592
Oklahoma State University $119,235,776 $118,229,024
University of Utah $111,483,459 $110,060,805
Brigham Young University $106,430,702 $106,430,702
West Virginia University $103,142,400 $103,142,400
Kansas State University $102,332,761 $96,925,648
Iowa State University $93,048,114 $92,987,544
University of Central Florida $88,199,644 $88,199,644
University of Houston $84,023,065 $84,023,065
University of Cincinnati $77,436,016 $77,436,016

Template:Notelist

The following table shows Big 12 Conference distributions during the fiscal year ending June 2023 as reported by ProPublica using Schedule A of the Big 12 Conference tax filings<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Institution 2022–23 Distribution
Texas Christian University $48,258,005
University of Oklahoma
Left Big 12 for SEC July 1, 2024
$45,195,567
Kansas State University $45,038,935
University of Texas at Austin
Left Big 12 for SEC July 1, 2024
$44,711,453
University of Kansas $44,104,036
Oklahoma State University $43,821,197
Texas Tech University $43,663,496
Baylor University $43,072,005
Iowa State University $42,190,473
West Virginia University $41,984,886
Average for 10 Schools $44,204,005

ApparelEdit

School Provider
Arizona Nike
Arizona State Adidas
Baylor Nike
BYU Nike
Colorado Nike
Cincinnati Nike, Air Jordan (basketball only)
Houston Nike, Air Jordan (basketball only)
Iowa State Nike
Kansas Adidas
Kansas State Nike
Oklahoma State Nike
TCU Nike
Texas Tech Adidas
UCF Nike
Utah Under Armour
West Virginia Nike

FacilitiesEdit

School Football stadium Capacity Basketball arena Capacity Baseball stadium Capacity Softball Stadium Capacity
Arizona Arizona Stadium Template:Nts McKale Center Template:Nts Hi Corbett Field Template:Nts Rita Hillenbrand Memorial Stadium Template:Nts
Arizona State Mountain America Stadium Template:Nts Desert Financial Arena Template:Nts Phoenix Municipal Stadium Template:Nts Alberta B. Farrington Softball Stadium Template:Nts
Baylor McLane Stadium Template:Nts Foster PavilionTemplate:Efn Template:Nts Baylor Ballpark Template:Nts Getterman Stadium Template:Nts
BYU LaVell Edwards Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Marriott Center Template:Nts Larry H. Miller Field Template:Nts Gail Miller Field Template:Nts
Cincinnati Nippert Stadium Template:Nts Fifth Third Arena Template:Nts UC Baseball Stadium Template:Nts Template:Hidden sort keyNon-softball university
Colorado Folsom Field Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

CU Events Center Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Template:Hidden sort keyNon-baseball university Template:Hidden sort keyNon-softball university
Houston TDECU Stadium Template:Nts Fertitta Center Template:Nts Darryl & Lori Schroeder Park Template:Nts Cougar Softball Stadium Template:Nts
Iowa State Jack Trice Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Hilton Coliseum Template:Nts Template:Hidden sort keyNon-baseball universityTemplate:Efn Cyclone Sports Complex Template:Nts
Kansas David Booth Kansas Memorial StadiumTemplate:Efn Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Allen Fieldhouse Template:Nts Hoglund Ballpark Template:Nts Arrocha Ballpark Template:Nts
Kansas State Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Bramlage Coliseum Template:Nts Tointon Family Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Template:Hidden sort keyNon-softball university
Oklahoma State Boone Pickens Stadium Template:Nts Gallagher-Iba Arena Template:Nts O'Brate Stadium Template:NtsTemplate:Efn Cowgirl Stadium Template:Nts
TCU Amon G. Carter Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Schollmaier Arena citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Lupton Stadium Template:Nts Template:Hidden sort keyNon-softball university
Texas Tech Jones AT&T Stadium Template:Nts<ref name=TexasTechCapacity>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

United Supermarkets Arena Template:Nts Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park Template:Nts Rocky Johnson Field Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

UCF FBC Mortgage Stadium (Bounce House) Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Addition Financial Arena Template:Nts John Euliano Park Template:Nts UCF Softball Complex Template:Nts
Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium Template:Nts Jon M. Huntsman Center Template:Nts Smith's BallparkTemplate:Efn Template:Nts Dumke Family Softball Stadium Template:Nts
West Virginia Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

WVU Coliseum Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Monongalia County Ballpark Template:Nts<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Template:Hidden sort keyNon-softball university

Template:Notelist

Key personnelEdit

School Athletic Director Football Coach citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>!! Men's basketball coach !! Salary !! Women's basketball coach !! Baseball coach !! Softball coach

Arizona Desiree Reed-Francois Brent Brennan $3,100,000 Tommy Lloyd $5,250,000 Becky Burke Chip Hale Caitlin Lowe
Arizona State Graham Rossini Kenny Dillingham $3,950,000 Bobby Hurley $2,800,000 Molly Miller Willie Bloomquist Megan Bartlett
Baylor Mack Rhoades Dave Aranda $4,540,885 Scott Drew $5,132,821 Nicki Collen Mitch Thompson Glenn Moore
BYU Tom Holmoe Kalani Sitake NA† Kevin Young NA† Lee Cummard Trent Pratt Gordon Eakin
Cincinnati John Cunningham Scott Satterfield $3,600,000 Wes Miller $2,550,000 Katrina Merriweather Jordan Bischel
Colorado Rick George Deion Sanders $5,700,000 Tad Boyle $2,634,000 JR Payne
Houston Eddie Nuñez Willie Fritz $4,500,000 Kelvin Sampson $4,610,000 Matthew Mitchell Todd Whitting Kristin Vesely
Iowa State Jamie Pollard Matt Campbell $4,009,886 T. J. Otzelberger $2,504,179 Bill Fennelly Jamie Pinkerton
Kansas Travis Goff Lance Leipold $7,500,000 Bill Self $9,453,800 Brandon Schneider Dan Fitzgerald Jennifer McFalls
Kansas State Gene Taylor Chris Klieman $5,250,000 Jerome Tang $3,223,333 Jeff Mittie Pete Hughes
Oklahoma State Chad Weiberg Mike Gundy $7,750,000 Steve Lutz $2,400,000 Jacie Hoyt Josh Holliday Kenny Gajewski
TCU Mike Buddie Sonny Dykes $5,008,414 Jamie Dixon NA† Mark Campbell Kirk Saarloos
Texas Tech Kirby Hocutt Joey McGuire $4,247,960 Grant McCasland $2,900,000 Krista Gerlich Tim Tadlock Craig Snider
UCF Terry Mohajir Scott Frost $4,000,000 Johnny Dawkins $1,703,500 Sytia Messer Rich Wallace Cindy Ball-Malone
Utah Mark Harlan Kyle Whittingham $6,525,000 Alex Jensen Lynne Roberts Gary Henderson Amy Hogue
West Virginia Wren Baker Rich Rodriguez $3,500,000 Ross Hodge Mark Kellogg Randy Mazey
Notes

Template:Notelist

Sources:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
†Private institution not required to release coaching salaries
•Salaries based on 2022–2023 academic year

ChampionshipsEdit

National team titles by institutionEdit

Template:See alsoThe national championships listed below are as of May 28, 2025.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Football, Helms, pre-NCAA competition and overall equestrian titles are included in the total, but excluded from the column listing NCAA and AIAW titles.

Big 12 National Championships
University Total Titles Titles as a member of the Big 12 NCAA titles<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Men's Women's Co-ed AIAW titlesTemplate:Double dagger Notes
Oklahoma State 56 13 54 54 0 0 0 1 claimed football and equestrian title
Arizona State 43 0 25 12 13 0 18
Colorado 30 9 28 16 3 9 1 1 claimed football title
Utah 29 0 26 2 9 15 3
West Virginia 24 4 21 1 0 20 0 3 pre-NCAA rifle titles
Arizona 21 0 19 7 12 0 2
Iowa State 18 0 13 13 0 0 5
Houston 17 0 17 17 0 0 0
BYU 14 2 13 7 6 0 0 1 claimed football title
Kansas 14 3 12 11 1 0 0 2 Helms basketball titles
TCU 9 3 7 1 2 4 0 2 claimed football titles
Baylor 5 5 5 2 3 0 0
Texas Tech 3 2 3 2 1 0 0
Cincinnati 2 0 2 2 0 0 0
UCF 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 claimed football title
Kansas State 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 280 38 240 146 48 46 29

† Co-ed sports include fencing (since 1990), rifle, and skiing (since 1983). Team fencing championships before 1990 and team skiing championships before 1983 were awarded as men's or women's championships and are counted here as such.
Template:Double dagger Includes titles won under the DGWS, predecessor of the AIAW.

Most recent NCAA championshipEdit

Legend for Most Recent National Title table by School
Indicator Meaning
* Most recent NCAA championship
University Year Sport
Arizona 2018 Women's Golf
Arizona State 2024 Men’s Swimming & Dive
Baylor 2021 Men's Basketball
BYU 2024 Men's cross country
Cincinnati 1962 Men's Basketball
Colorado 2024 Skiing
Houston 1985 Men's Golf
Iowa State 1994 Men's Cross Country
Kansas 2022 Men's Basketball
Kansas State
Oklahoma State 2025 Men's Golf
TCU 2025 Beach Volleyball
Texas Tech 2024 Men's Indoor Track & Field
UCF
Utah 2025 Skiing
West Virginia* 2025 Rifle

National championshipsEdit

The following is a list of all NCAA, equestrian, and college football championships won by teams that were representing the Big 12 Conference in NCAA-recognized sports at the time of their championship.<ref name=NCAAChamps>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The most recent Big 12 team to win a national title is Oklahoma State men's golf in 2025. Only two years of the Big 12's existence has the conference not won at least one team National Title, 2007 and 2020. However, in 2020 multiple National Championships were not awarded due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

One former member of the conference did not win a National Championship while a member of the Big 12, Missouri. Original members Kansas State and Iowa State have not won a championship while representing the Big 12. The only national championships won by 2012 arrival West Virginia since joining the Big 12 have been in rifle, a sport that the conference has never sponsored. Of the 2023 arrivals, Houston, UCF, and Cincinnati have not won a championship in the Big 12, but BYU has won in women’s and men’s cross country.

Men's swimming has the most overall championships with 10, while men's golf has the most different schools win a championship with 4.

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break Football (3):
1997 – Nebraska
2000 – Oklahoma
2005 – Texas

Equestrian (3):
2002 − Texas A&M Template:Small
2012 – Texas A&M Template:Small
2022 – Oklahoma State Template:Small

Baseball (2):
2002 – Texas
2005 – Texas

Men's Basketball (3):
2008 – Kansas
2021 – Baylor
2022 – Kansas

Women's Basketball (4):
2005 – Baylor
2011 – Texas A&M
2012 – Baylor
2019 – Baylor

Women's Bowling (5):
1999 – Nebraska
2001 – Nebraska
2004 – Nebraska
2005 – Nebraska
2009 – Nebraska

Template:Col-break Men's Cross Country (8):
2001 – Colorado
2004 – Colorado
2006 – Colorado
2009 – Oklahoma State
2010 – Oklahoma State
2012 – Oklahoma State
2023 – Oklahoma State
2024 – BYU

Women's Cross Country (3):
2000 – Colorado
2004 – Colorado
2024 – BYU

Men's Golf (7):
2000 – Oklahoma State
2006 – Oklahoma State
2009 – Texas A&M
2012 – Texas
2017 – Oklahoma
2018 – Oklahoma State
2022 – Texas
2025 – Oklahoma State

Rifle (7):
2013 – West Virginia
2014 – West Virginia
2015 – West Virginia
2016 – West Virginia
2017 – West Virginia
2019 – TCU
2024 – TCU
2025 – West Virginia

Women's Gymnastics (6):
2014 – Oklahoma
2016 – Oklahoma
2017 – Oklahoma
2019 – Oklahoma
2022 – Oklahoma
2023 – Oklahoma

Template:Col-break Men's Gymnastics (9):
2002 – Oklahoma
2003 – Oklahoma
2005 – Oklahoma
2006 – Oklahoma
2008 – Oklahoma
2015 – Oklahoma
2016 – Oklahoma
2017 – Oklahoma
2018 – Oklahoma

Men's Indoor Track (1):
2024 – Texas Tech<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Women's Indoor Track (3):
1998 – Texas
1999 – Texas
2006 – Texas

Men's Outdoor Track (4):
2009 – Texas A&M
2010 – Texas A&M
2011 – Texas A&M
2019 – Texas Tech

Women's Outdoor Track (8):
1998 – Texas
1999 – Texas
2005 – Texas
2009 – Texas A&M
2010 – Texas A&M
2011 – Texas A&M
2013 – Kansas
2023 – Texas

Women's Rowing (3):
2021 – Texas
2022 – Texas
2024 – Texas

Men's/Women's Skiing (4):
1998 – Colorado
1999 – Colorado
2006 – Colorado
2011 – Colorado
2024 – Colorado
2025 – Utah Template:Col-break

Softball (8):
2000 – Oklahoma
2013 – Oklahoma
2016 – Oklahoma
2017 – Oklahoma
2021 – Oklahoma
2022 – Oklahoma
2023 – Oklahoma
2024 – Oklahoma

Men's Swimming (10):
1996 – Texas
2000 – Texas
2001 – Texas
2002 – Texas
2010 – Texas
2015 – Texas
2016 – Texas
2017 – Texas
2018 – Texas
2021 – Texas

Men's Tennis (3):
2004 – Baylor
2019 – Texas
2024 – TCU

Women's Tennis (2):
2021 – Texas
2022 – Texas

Women's Volleyball (5):
2000 – Nebraska
2006 – Nebraska
2012 – Texas
2022 – Texas
2023 – Texas

Beach Volleyball (1):
2025 – TCU

Wrestling (4):
2003 – Oklahoma State
2004 – Oklahoma State
2005 – Oklahoma State
2006 – Oklahoma State
Template:Col-end

Conference championsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

The Conference sponsors 23 sports, 10 men's and 13 women's.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In football, divisional titles were awarded based on regular-season conference results, with the teams with the best conference records from the North and South playing in the Big 12 Championship Game from 1996 to 2010. Baseball, basketball, softball, tennis and women's soccer titles are awarded in both regular-season and tournament play. Cross country, golf, gymnastics, swimming and diving, track and field, and wrestling titles are awarded during an annual meet of participating teams. The volleyball title is awarded based on regular-season play.

<section begin=Big12Champs />

citation
CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

University Years Regular Season Postseason Total
Arizona Wildcats 2024–present 0 3 3
Arizona State Sun Devils 2024–present 1 3 4
Baylor Bears 1996–present 48 41 89
BYU Cougars 2023–present 0 3 3
Cincinnati Bearcats 2023–present 0 0 0
Colorado Buffaloes 1996–2011,
2024–present
5 26 31
Houston Cougars 2023–present 2 1 3
Iowa State Cyclones 1996–present 4 27 31
Kansas Jayhawks 1996–present 25 20 45
Kansas State Wildcats 1996–present 11 7 18
Oklahoma State Cowboys 1996–present 16 87 103
TCU Horned Frogs 2012–present 15 10 25
Texas Tech Red Raiders 1996–present 16 23 39
UCF Knights 2023–present 1 1 2
Utah Utes 2024–present 1 1 2
West Virginia Mountaineers 2012–present 8 6 14

<section end=Big12Champs />

FootballEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

The first football game in conference play was Texas Tech vs. Kansas State in 1996, won by Kansas State, 21–14.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

From 1996 to 2010, Big 12 Conference teams played eight conference games a season. Each team faced all five opponents within its own division and three teams from the opposite division. Inter-divisional play was a "three-on, three-off" system, where teams would play three teams from the other division on a home-and-home basis for two seasons, and then play the other three foes from the opposite side for a two-year home-and-home.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

This format came under considerable criticism, especially from Nebraska and Oklahoma, who were denied a yearly match between two of college football's most storied programs.Template:Citation needed The Nebraska-Oklahoma rivalry was one of the most intense in college football history.Template:Citation needed (Until 2006, the teams had never met in the Big 12 Championship.) Due to the departure of Nebraska and Colorado in 2011, the Big 12 eliminated the divisions (and championship game) and instituted a nine-game round-robin format.Template:Citation needed With the advent of the College Football Playoff committee looking at teams' strength of schedule for picking the four playoff teams, on December 8, 2015, the Big 12 announced an annual requirement for all Big 12 teams to schedule a non-conference game against a team from the four other Power Five conferences (plus Notre Dame).<ref name="non-conf schedule req">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Per Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby: "Schedule strength is a key component in CFP Selection Committee deliberations. This move will strengthen the resumes for all Big 12 teams. Coupled with the nine-game full round robin Conference schedule our teams play, it will not only benefit the teams at the top of our standings each season, but will impact the overall strength of the Conference."<ref name="non-conf schedule req" /> The Big 12 has made it to the Playoffs 6 times from 2014 to 2023. Four Big 12 participants have made it to the playoff: Oklahoma in 2015, 2017, 2018, and 2019; Texas in 2023; TCU in 2022; and Arizona State in 2024.

Championship gameEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

The Big 12 Championship Game game was approved by all members except Nebraska.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It was held each year, commencing with the first match in the 1996 season at the Trans World Dome in St. Louis. It pitted the division champions against each other after the regular season was completed.

Following the 2008 game, the event was moved to the new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, being played there in 2009 and 2010. In 2010, the Sooners defeated the Cornhuskers 23–20.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

After 2010, the game was moved to Arlington for 2011, 2012, and 2013.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> However, the decision became moot following the 2010 season because the league lacked sufficient members.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In April 2015, the ACC and the Big 12 developed new rules for the NCAA to deregulate conference championship games. The measure passed on January 14, 2016, allowing a conference with fewer than 12 teams to stage a championship game that does not count against the FBS limit of 12 regular-season games under either of the following circumstances:

  • The game involves the top two teams following a full round-robin conference schedule.
  • The game involves two divisional winners, each having played a full round-robin schedule in its division.

Under the first criterion, the Big 12 championship game resumed at the conclusion of the 2017 regular season, and is played during the first weekend of December, the time all other FBS conference championship games are played.

Bowl affiliationsEdit

The following were bowl games for the Big 12 for the 2022 season.Template:Update inline

Pick citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Location Opposing conference
College Football Playoff
1 Sugar Bowl New Orleans, Louisiana SEC
2 Alamo Bowl San Antonio, Texas Pac-12
3 Cheez-It Bowl Orlando, Florida ACC
4 Texas Bowl Houston, Texas SEC
5 Liberty Bowl Memphis, Tennessee SEC
6 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Phoenix, Arizona Big Ten
7‡ Armed Forces Bowl Fort Worth, Texas AAC/C-USA
7‡ First Responder Bowl Dallas, Texas AAC/ACC/C-USA
†The Big 12 champion will go to the Sugar Bowl unless selected for the College Football Playoff. In the event that the conference champion is selected for the playoff, the conference runner-up will go to the Sugar Bowl. In years in which the Sugar Bowl is a CFP semifinal, the Big 12 champion (runner-up if the champion is selected for the CFP) is slotted to the Cotton, Fiesta or Peach Bowls.

‡The seventh selection is a "flex pick."

RivalriesEdit

The Big 12 is known for rivalries (primarily in football) that mostly predate the conference. The Kansas-Missouri rivalry was the longest running, the longest west of the Mississippi, and the second longest in college football, dating back to the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association before evolving into the Big Eight. It was played 119 times before Missouri left the Big 12. As of October 2012, the University of Kansas' athletic department had not accepted Missouri's invitations to play inter-conference rivalry games, putting the rivalry on hold. Sports clubs sponsored by the two universities continued to play each other.<ref name="Border Showdown Continues">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Kansas and Missouri renewed the rivalry in men's basketball starting in December 2021, and have announced that they will meet again in football in 2025.

The rivalry between TCU and Baylor, known as the Revivalry is also one of the longest running in college football, with the two universities having played each other — largely as Southwest Conference members — 120 times since 1899. Following the 2024 game, TCU leads the series 59–54–7.

Some of the football rivalries between Big 12 universities include:

Rivalry Name Trophy Games
played
Began Record
Arizona–Arizona State Duel in the Desert Territorial Cup 98 1899 Arizona 51–45–1
Baylor–Houston 30 1950 Baylor 15–14–1
Baylor–TCU Bluebonnet Battle / Revivalry 120 1899 TCU 59–54–7
Baylor–Texas Tech 83 1929 Baylor 42–40–1
BYU–Utah Holy War Beehive Boot 102 1896 Utah 62–36–4
Cincinnati–UCF 10 2015 Tied 5–5
Cincinnati–West Virginia 22 1921 West Virginia 18–3–1
Colorado–Kansas State 67 1912 Colorado 45–21–1
Colorado–Utah Rumble in the Rockies 70 1903 Utah 35–32–3
Houston–Texas Tech 35 1951 Houston 18–16–1
Iowa State–Kansas State Farmageddon 108 1917 Iowa State 54–50–4
Kansas–Kansas State Sunflower Showdown Governor's Cup 122 1902 Kansas 65–52–5
TCU–Texas Tech West Texas Championship The Saddle Trophy 67 1926 Texas Tech 33–31–3

Men's BasketballEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

As of the end of the 2023–2024 season, nine current Big 12 members are among the teams with the most wins and/or the highest win percentage in NCAA Division 1 men's basketball: Kansas (#2 in wins, #3 in percentage), Cincinnati (#12 wins, #19 percentage), Utah (#15 wins, #22 percentage), BYU (#17 wins, #31 percentage), Arizona (#19 wins, #10 percentage), West Virginia (#20 wins, #36 percentage), Houston (#37 percentage), Oklahoma State (#39 wins), and Kansas State (#42 wins). On the list of the most Final Four appearances, Kansas is #5 and Cincinnati, Houston, and Oklahoma State are all tied (with several other schools) at #11.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

From 1996 to 2011, standings in conference play were not split among divisions, although the schedule was structured as if they were. Teams played a home-and-home against teams within their divisions and a single game against teams from the opposite division for a total of 16 conference games. After Nebraska and Colorado left, Big 12 play transitioned to an 18-game, double round robin schedule.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> When the conference temporarily expanded to 14 members for the 2023–24 season, the 18-game schedule remained, but the double round-robin was discontinued in favor of a new scheduling formula.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2024–25, the Big 12 played a 20-game schedule, but due to input from coaches the league will play an 18-game schedule in 2025-26.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Conference championsEdit

{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= {{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Ambox }} }} Template:See also

Kansas has the most Big 12 titles, winning or sharing the regular-season title 20 times in the league's 25 seasons, including 13 straight from 2004–05 to 2016–17. The 2002 Jayhawks became the first, and so far only, team to complete an undefeated Big 12 regular season, going 16–0. Though rematches between Big 12 regular season co-champions have happened in that year's Big 12 tournament, none have met in the ensuing NCAA Tournament.

Season Regular season champion Tournament champion
1996–97 Kansas Kansas
1997–98 Kansas (2) Kansas (2)
1998–99 Texas Kansas (3)
1999–00 Iowa State Iowa State
2000–01 Iowa State (2) Oklahoma
2001–02 Kansas (3) Oklahoma (2)
2002–03 Kansas (4) Oklahoma (3)
2003–04 Oklahoma State Oklahoma State
2004–05 Oklahoma
Kansas (5)
Oklahoma State (2)
2005–06 Texas (2)
Kansas (6)
Kansas (4)
2006–07 Kansas (7) Kansas (5)
2007–08 Texas (3)
Kansas (8)
Kansas (6)
2008–09 Kansas (9) Missouri
2009–10 Kansas (10) Kansas (7)
2010–11 Kansas (11) Kansas (8)
2011–12 Kansas (12) Missouri (2)
2012–13 Kansas (13)
Kansas State
Kansas (9)
2013–14 Kansas (14) Iowa State (2)
2014–15 Kansas (15) Iowa State (3)
2015–16 Kansas (16) Kansas (10)
2016–17 Kansas (17) Iowa State (4)
2017–18 Kansas [18]* Kansas [11]*
2018–19 Kansas State (2)
Texas Tech
Iowa State (5)
2019–20 Kansas (19 [18]) Canceled**
2020–21 Baylor Texas
202122 Kansas (20 [19])
Baylor (2)
Kansas (12 [11])
202223 Kansas (21 [20]) Texas (2)
202324 Houston Iowa State (6)
202425 Houston (2) Houston

Template:Small
In 2021–22, Kansas won the seeding tiebreaker over Baylor for the Big 12 Tournament, as Kansas had gone 1–1 against third place team Texas Tech, while Baylor had been swept by Texas Tech.

NCAA tournament performanceEdit

Totals through the end of the 2024–25 season.<ref name="Big12recordbook">Template:Citation</ref><ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

University Appearances Final Fours Championships
Arizona 39 4 1
Arizona State 17 0 0
Baylor 17 3 1
BYU 32 0 0
UCF 5 0 0
Cincinnati 33 6 2
Colorado 16 2 0
Houston 26 7 0
Iowa State 24 1 0
Kansas 52 15 4
Kansas State 32 4 0
Oklahoma State 29 6 2
TCU 11 0 0
Texas Tech 20 1 0
Utah 29 4 1
West Virginia 31 2 0

Template:Small Template:Small

Template:Small

Template:Small

All-time winsEdit

Source:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Team Big 12 Record Big 12 Winning % Overall record Overall winning % Big 12 regular season championships Big 12 tournament championships
Arizona 14–6 Template:Winning percentage 1889–986–1 Template:Winning percentage - -
Arizona State 4–16 Template:Winning percentage 1468–1303 Template:Winning percentage - -
Baylor 232–258 Template:Winning percentage 1434–1387 Template:Winning percentage 2 -
BYU 24–14 Template:Winning percentage 1892–1145 Template:Winning percentage - -
UCF 14–24 Template:Winning percentage 874–688 Template:Winning percentage - -
Cincinnati 14–24 Template:Winning percentage 1911–1079 Template:Winning percentage - -
Houston 34–4 Template:Winning percentage 1435–882 Template:Winning percentage 2 1
Colorado 101–170 Template:Winning percentage 1427–1271 Template:Winning percentage - -
Iowa State 228–266 Template:Winning percentage 1460–1398 Template:Winning percentage 2 6
Kansas 391–103 Template:Winning percentage 2393–896 Template:Winning percentage 21 12
Kansas State 221–273 Template:Winning percentage 1740–1238 Template:Winning percentage 2 -
Oklahoma State 244–250 Template:Winning percentage 1748–1249 Template:Winning percentage 1 2
TCU 77–157 Template:Winning percentage 1319–1476 Template:Winning percentage - -
Texas Tech 211–282 Template:Winning percentage 1514–1180 Template:Winning percentage 1 -
Utah 8–12 Template:Winning percentage 1897–1081 Template:Winning percentage - -
West Virginia 111–124 Template:Winning percentage 1855–1175 Template:Winning percentage - -

Totals though the end of the 2024−25 regular season.

All-time series recordEdit

Totals from though the end of the 2023–24 season.
Includes any regular season match up regardless of conference affiliation or postseason meetings.

Source:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Template:Spaces style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Arizona style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Arizona
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Baylor style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. BYU style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. UCF style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Cincinnati style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Colorado style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Houston style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle;" width="75"|vs. Iowa
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Kansas
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Oklahoma
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. TCU style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Texas
Tech
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Utah style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. West
Virginia
Total
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Arizona 161–87 5–5 20–19 0–0 4–0 26–16 6–6 4–3 4–8 6–8 3–0 1–2 24–28 40–32 3–2 307–216
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Arizona
State
87–161 2–7 22–28 0–0 1–2 12–16 3–3 2–1 6–5 5–4 3–5 2–3 19–22 28–37 0–0 182–294
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Baylor 5–5 7–2 6–6 1–0 1–0 11–16 16–39 25–24 10–37 25–26 37–57 109–89 65–83 0–3 17–8 335–395
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|BYU 19–20 28–22 6–6 3–0 2–2 6–17 3–6 1–7 2–4 4–5 5–4 20–3 3–3 134–129 2–1 238–229
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| UCF 0–0 0–0 0–1 0–3 5–17 1–1 11–24 0–1 1–0 0–3 3–0 1–1 1–1 1–0 1–2 25–54
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Cincinnati 0–4 2–1 0–1 2–2 17–5 7–1 33–16 4–3 5–4 8–1 2–4 6–1 2–0 3–1 12–11 119–77
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Colorado 16–26 16–12 16–11 17–6 1–1 1–7 3–3 78–70 40–124 48–96 61–48 2–2 13–18 12–18 0–0 324–442
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Houston 6–6 3–3 39–16 6–3 24–11 16–33 3–3 4–5 3–6 4–5 10–13 49–26 31–27 0–1 1–0 199–158
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle;" width="75"|Iowa
State
3–4 1–2 24–25 7–1 1–0 3–4 70–78 5–4 68–190 94–146 68–72 17–14 23–22 1–2 10–14 395–578
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Kansas 8–4 5–6 37–10 4–2 0–1 4–5 124–40 6–3 190–68 205–96 125–60 26–4 43–8 2–0 27–7 806–314
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Kansas
State
8–6 4–5 26–25 5–4 3–0 1–8 96–48 5–4 149–94 96–205 87–59 21–13 26–25 2–1 12–16 541–513
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Oklahoma
State
0–3 5–3 57–37 4–5 0–3 4–2 48–61 13–10 72–68 60–125 59–87 29–14 50–26 4–1 13–12 418–457
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|TCU 2–1 3–2 89–109 3–20 1–1 1–6 2–2 26–49 14–17 4–26 13–21 14–29 56–87 16–6 7–18 251–394
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Texas
Tech
28–24 22–19 83–65 3–3 1–1 0–2 18–13 27–31 22–23 8–43 25–26 26–50 87–56 3–4 10–18 363–378
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Utah 32–40 37–28 3–0 129–134 0–1 1–3 18–12 1–0 2–1 0–2 1–2 1–4 6–16 4–3 6–0 241–246
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|West
Virginia
2–3 0–0 8–17 1–2 2–1 11–12 0–0 0–1 14–10 7–27 16–12 12–13 18–7 18–10 0–6 109–121

Big 12 series recordEdit

1997 - 2024 as Big 12 Members

Source:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Some of the values from the bottom of page 32 don't match with the detailed numbers given on pages 33–41 so that latter values were used: *

Template:Spaces style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Arizona style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Arizona
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Baylor style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. BYU style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. UCF style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Cincinnati style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Colorado style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Houston style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle;" width="75"|vs. Iowa
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Kansas
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Oklahoma
State
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. TCU style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Texas
Tech
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. Utah style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|vs. West
Virginia
Total
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Arizona 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Arizona
State
0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Baylor 0–0 0–0 1–1 1–0 1–0 0–0 0–1 24–19 9–34 26–17 * 26–31 20–5 * 29–26 0–0 13–9 149–144
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|BYU 0–0 0–0 1–1 2–0 0–1 0–0 0–1 1–1 1–0 1–1 1–1 1–0 0–1 0–0 1–0 8–7
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| UCF 0–0 0–0 0–1 0–2 0–2 0–0 0–2 0–1 1–0 0–1 1–0 1–0 1–1 0–0 1–1 5–11
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Cincinnati 0–0 0–0 0–1 1–0 2–0 0–0 0–2 0–1 0–1 1–0 0–1 1–1 1–0 0–0 1–1 6–8
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Colorado 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Houston 0–0 0–0 1–0 1–0 2–0 2–0 0–0 1–1 1–1 1–0 1–0 0–1 1–0 0–0 1–0 12–3
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle;" width="75"|Iowa
State
0–0 0–0 19–24 1–1 1–0 1–0 0–0 1–1 16–43 29–28 20–24 14–9 20–21 0–0 9–12 * 131–163
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Kansas 0–0 0–0 34–9 0–1 0–1 1–0 0–0 1–1 43–16 57–7 34–13 21–3 * 34–8 0–0 19–7 * 244–59
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Kansas
State
0–0 0–0 17–26 * 1–1 1–0 0–1 0–0 0–1 28–29 7–57 18–26 * 17–8 * 18–23 * 0–0 10–14 117–186
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Oklahoma
State
0–0 0–0 31–26 1–1 0–1 1–0 0–0 0–1 24–20 13–34 26–18 * 11–11 39–22 0–0 12–10 158–144
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|TCU 0–0 0–0 5–20 * 0–1 0–1 1–1 0–0 1–0 9–14 3–21 8–17 * 11–11 7–15 0–0 6–17 51–118
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|Texas
Tech
0–0 0–0 26–29 1–0 1–1 0–1 0–0 0–1 21–20 8–34 23–18 * 22–39 15–7 * 0–0 9–15 * 126–165
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"| Utah 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle" width="75"|West
Virginia
0–0 0–0 8–14 0–1 1–1 1–1 0–0 0–1 12–9 * 7–19 * 14–10 10–12 17–6 15–9 * 0–0 85–83

BaseballEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} All current Big 12 members sponsor baseball except Colorado, which never sponsored baseball during its first conference tenure and still does not sponsor the sport, and Iowa State, which dropped the sport after the 2001 season. All other former Big 12 members sponsored the sport throughout their tenures in the conference.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break

Baseball titles by university
Team Season Regular Season Tournament Total
Arizona 2025–present 0 1 1
Arizona State 2025–present 0 0 0
Baylor 1997–present 3 1 4
BYU 2024–present 0 0 0
Cincinnati 2024–present 0 0 0
Houston 2024–present 0 0 0
Iowa State 1997–2001 0 0 0
Kansas 1997–present 0 1 1
Kansas State 1997–present 1 0 1
Missouri 1997–2012 0 1 1
Nebraska 1997–2011 3 4 7
Oklahoma 1997–2024 1 3 4
Oklahoma State 1997–present 2 4 6
TCU 2013–present 3 4 7
Texas 1997–2024 10 5 15
Texas A&M 1997–2012 4 3 7
Texas Tech 1997–present 4 1 5
UCF 2024–present 0 0 0
Utah 2025–present 0 0 0
West Virginia 2013–present 2 0 2

Template:Col-break

Baseball titles by season
Season Regular season Tournament
1997 Texas Tech Oklahoma
1998 Texas A&M Texas Tech
1999 Texas A&M Nebraska
2000 Baylor Nebraska
2001 Nebraska Nebraska
2002 Texas Texas
2003 Nebraska Texas
2004 Texas Oklahoma State
2005 Baylor Nebraska
Nebraska
2006 Texas Kansas
2007 Texas Texas A&M
2008 Texas A&M Texas
2009 Texas Texas
2010 Texas Texas A&M
2011 Texas Texas A&M
Texas A&M
2012 Baylor University Missouri
2013 Kansas State Oklahoma
2014 Oklahoma State TCU
2015 TCU Texas
2016 Texas Tech TCU
2017 TCU Oklahoma State
Texas Tech
2018 Texas Baylor
2019 Texas Tech Oklahoma State
2020 none none
2021 Texas TCU
TCU
2022 TCU Oklahoma
2023 Texas TCU
Oklahoma State
West Virginia
2024 Oklahoma Oklahoma State
2025 West Virginia Arizona

Template:Col-end

NCAA tournament performanceEdit

Totals through the end of the 2025 season.

University NCAA Appearances CWS Appearances CWS Championships Championship Seasons
Arizona 44 18 4 1976, 1980, 1986, 2012
Arizona State 42 22 5 1965, 1967, 1969, 1977, 1981
Baylor 21 3 0 -
BYU 16 2 0 -
Cincinnati 8 0 0 -
Houston 22 2 0 -
Iowa State 3 2 0 -
Kansas 6 1 0 -
Kansas State 6 0 0 -
Oklahoma State 50 20 1 1959
TCU 20 6 0 -
Texas Tech 18 4 0 -
UCF 13 0 0 -
Utah 5 1 0 -
West Virginia 16 0 0 -

Broadcasting and media rightsEdit

The Big 12's media rights are controlled primarily by ESPN (ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and ESPN+) and Fox Sports (Fox and FS1). Since 2012, ESPN has sublicensed college basketball games to CBS Sports.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> Beginning in 2025, ESPN will sublicense college football and basketball games to TNT Sports.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

2012 media dealEdit

On September 7, 2012, the Big 12 announced a 13-year agreement with ESPN and Fox valued at $2.6 billion in total. ESPN and Fox split college football rights, while the basketball inventory was held by ESPN with sublicensing options for CBS Sports and Fox Sports. The agreement also included a grant of rights for all current Big 12 teams over the period of the contract.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In addition to the national agreement, each Big 12 university maintained the right to sell its "third-tier" covering selected events per-season (including one football game, basketball games, and other events outside of those sports). The third-tier rights to the Texas Longhorns are held through a channel dedicated to the team — Longhorn Network — which is operated by ESPN. In 2019, ESPN announced that it would acquire the third-tier rights to all Big 12 teams through 2024–25 (excluding Oklahoma and Texas, which are still under long-term contracts with ESPN+ and Longhorn Network respectively), and place their content on its subscription streaming service ESPN+. ESPN also acquired exclusive rights to all future Big 12 football championship games, replacing the previous alternation between ESPN and Fox.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
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2025 extension dealEdit

On October 30, 2022, the Big 12 announced that it had reached early broadcast deal to renew rights with ESPN network (includes ABC rights) and Fox. It is a six-year media rights agreement worth a total of $2.3 billion, but also reportedly includes an "escalator clause" that will raise the value of the contracts if only Power Five schools are added. By striking a deal prior to the exclusive negotiating window with ESPN and Fox, the Big 12 managed to achieve several of its primary objectives of stability and security, including the ability to consult its member schools to seek an extended grant of rights and potential future conference expansion. Fox's deal also places a slate of Big 12 college basketball games on Fox Sports for the first time.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • ESPN:
  • Fox Sports:
    • 26 football games per season:
    • Rights to a slate of college basketball games
  • TNT Sports
    • College football, men's basketball, and women's basketball games that would normally be broadcast on ESPN's streaming service ESPN+ will be licensed to TNT Sports to be broadcast on TNT and/or TBS, as well as the Max streaming service.
  • CBS
    • Sublicense rights to select college basketball games
  • NFL Network:

Big 12 StudiosEdit

In 2024, the Big 12 announced the creation of a Free ad-supported streaming television channel, Big 12 Studios, which will show content related to the games. The channel is operated in partnership with Raycom Sports.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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