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In the ever-shifting landscape of college athletics, the Mountain West Conference just played its smartest hand yet. On February 2, 2026, the league unveiled a comprehensive new media rights package with CBS Sports, FOX Sports, The CW Network, and streaming innovator Kiswe—securing six years of broadcasts starting in the 2026-27 season without sacrificing per-school payouts. This deal isn’t just about games on TV; it’s a lifeline for a “new-look” MW battered by realignment, ensuring mid-major relevance as power conferences feast on bigger rights checks.
From Old Pact to New Stability for Mountain West Mainstays
The outgoing CBS-FOX agreement, inked in 2020 for $270 million over seven years, delivered about $45 million annually, split across 12 full members—roughly $3.5 million per school after affiliates like Hawaii took their cut. That pact expires after the 2026 football season, but the MW’s grant-of-rights through 2031-32 provided leverage to negotiate without panic. Commissioner Gloria Nevarez framed it as a win for “broadest media distribution in conference history,” protecting financial floors even as Boise State, Fresno State, Colorado State, San Diego State, and Utah State bolted to a revived Pac-12 for 2026-27 football.
Litigation adds intrigue: The MW is chasing $18-20 million exit fees per departing school, plus a $55 million poaching claim against the Pac-12. Reserves and potential settlements could prop up shortfalls, keeping full members at that $3.5 million baseline. It’s not the windfall of Big Ten or SEC deals, but for a Group of Five league, it’s shrewd continuity.
Partners and Game Breakdown
The new lineup expands linear TV exposure while leaning into direct-to-consumer streaming—a nod to cord-cutting fans and creators alike. Here’s the per-year slate:
Over 150 live events hit broadcast/cable annually, up from prior cycles, with Kiswe’s app shifting to paid tiers (monthly/annual subs) for full access—think GCU hoops road games or Wyoming volleyball that might’ve been blacked out before. Football loses a few national slots (down 12 TV games total), but The CW’s addition targets younger demos underserved by ESPN dominance.
The Realignment-Rebuilt Roster
This deal lands amid the MW’s most turbulent reshape. Core football holdovers—UNLV, Air Force, Hawaii (now full-time), Nevada, New Mexico, San Jose State, UTEP (elevated to full), Wyoming—form the backbone. Non-football boosts come via Grand Canyon University (basketball powerhouse) and UC Davis, with Northern Illinois joining football-only. It’s a leaner 10-team football footprint, but a deeper Olympic sports slate.
For Phoenix fans and creators tracking GCU’s rise, this is gold: The Lopes, fresh off midseason buzz as a dark-horse contender, get Kiswe streaming prominence to build national buzz without football overhead. UNLV and Nevada, Vegas and Reno market anchors, lock in CBS/FOX marquee slots; UTEP’s full status elevates Sun Belt defectors into prime time.
Financial Realities and Comparisons
Financials stay under wraps—no $100 million-plus bombshell here—, but the MW prioritizes equity over explosion. Prior $3.5 million floor holds via clauses tying payouts to litigation wins or reserves. Compared to Pac-12’s CBS-heavy pact (financials TBD but likely leaner post-poaching) or old MW: This maintains the status quo while adding The CW’s 13 football windows.
Critics note subdued growth versus AAC’s ESPN surge, but Nevarez’s strategy bets on longevity. “We’re not chasing superconferences; we’re building sustainable visibility,” the deal implies.
Fan and Creator Wins (and Tradeoffs)
Fans score big: More free over-air games via The CW, Prime Video app integration for $10-15/month access, and no regional sports network blackouts. Road warriors catch Hawaii at Air Force without VPN hacks. Drawbacks? Subscription fatigue for full coverage, fewer FOX primetime showcases.
For sports journalists like those at greenvillesportsmedia.com, it’s content catnip. Analyze GCU’s streaming leap amid 8-3 conference tears; debate if UNLV’s CBS slots juice recruiting; forecast lawsuit cash fueling facility upgrades. X threads on “MW’s quiet power move” will pop—pair with box-score teases or player polls.
Looking Ahead: Mountain West Mid-Major Resilience
The Mountain West’s new media empire isn’t flashy, but it’s fortified—shielding schools from realignment whiplash while amplifying voices like GCU’s. As Pac-12 2.0 stumbles into 2026, expect MW football title games to steal FOX’s spotlight and March Madness autos to trend harder. This deal proves mid-majors don’t need nine-figure checks to thrive; they need smart distribution. Watch the “new-look” league cut nets in Vegas—stability might just be the ultimate game-changer.

