While Florida State in 2013 willingly signed the ACC’s original Grant of Rights, which was tied to the league’s television contract with ESPN, school officials point out that was designed to expire in 2027 at the conclusion of that media deal.
They say the GOR was extended three years later when ACC schools were told that ESPN would not move forward with a proposed ACC Network on cable television — similar to ones created by the SEC and Big Ten several years earlier — if that pact wasn’t extended.
From the complaint: “The ACC verbally represented to its members that ESPN had issued an ultimatum: unless each ACC member executed an extension of the ACC GofR, from 2027 to 2036, a full nine years beyond the then-expiration of ESPN’s Tier I agreement, ESPN would enter into no further media rights agreements with the ACC.”
Florida State’s then-president, John Thrasher, signed off on the extension, but FSU officials contend it was under false pretenses. According to the complaint, they believe the ACC “feigned” the ultimatum from ESPN in order to preserve the conference as long as possible.
“We were already in handcuffs,” an FSU source said. “Then they decided they were going to apply a second set of handcuffs.”