Teresa Gould to be Pac-12 commissioner after George Kliavkoff departs

Oct 25, 2022; San Francisco, CA, USA; Deputy commissioner Teresa Gould speaks during Pac-12 Women's Basketball Media Day at the Pac-12 Network Studios. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports
By Nicole Auerbach
Feb 19, 2024

The Pac-12 promoted deputy commissioner Teresa Gould to commissioner to succeed the outgoing George Kliavkoff, the conference announced Monday.

“I look forward to partnering with Oregon State and Washington State to secure a bright future for their student-athletes that allows them to compete at the highest level of college athletics, while enjoying the benefits of a quality campus experience,” Gould said in a statement. “Working in collaboration with their leadership and our talented staff, I am excited to build a pathway for the future that allows their programs to thrive.”

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Gould will help the two schools chart their course forward, as they head into a pivotal two-year stretch in which the Pac-12 determines whether it can rebuild for the long term. Its football teams have a scheduling partnership with the Mountain West for the fall, and most other athletic programs will have a temporary home in the West Coast Conference. But Gould will be tasked with figuring out the long-term future, if it exists.

On Friday, the Pac-12 announced Kliavkoff’s departure and characterized it as a mutual agreement. Kliavkoff’s last day will be Feb. 29 and Gould will take over March 1.

The news, while significant, was also a long time coming. Kliavkoff had been serving as a sort of lame-duck commissioner ever since early August 2023, when the Pac-12 conference lost most of its membership. Ten of the 12 current Pac-12 members will be in new leagues by next fall, with only Washington State and Oregon State remaining behind.

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Oregon State and Washington State had taken legal action against the 10 departing schools over control of the conference, with Kliavkoff, the Pac-12 and, eventually, the University of Washington as defendants. The Washington Supreme Court in December declined to hear an appeal from the University of Washington on a lower court ruling that granted control of the conference to Oregon State and Washington State. Both sides also reached a settlement in principle, and they continue to work out the details.

The two schools now make up the Pac-12 Board, and the Board was finally able to move on from Kliavkoff this week, turning the page to the future. A league source said that the two schools have been working to determine what is needed from the conference office for a two-school conference.

Kliavkoff was initially announced as Pac-12 commissioner in May 2021, replacing the outgoing Larry Scott, and Kliavkoff was hailed as an outsider coming in to shake up and modernize the conference. He was tasked with handling the league’s next round of media rights negotiations and asked to make up for distribution and financial deficiencies caused by Scott’s approach to the Pac-12 Networks.

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The collegiate environment changed quickly in Kliavkoff’s short tenure. A massive round of conference realignment began that July as Texas and Oklahoma announced their plans to leave the Big 12 for the SEC. The Pac-12 joined the Big Ten and ACC in the ill-fated “Alliance” meant to slow down realignment change. Instead, just a year later, USC and UCLA announced their plans to leave for the Big Ten. Kliavkoff said he was blindsided by the departures.

Kliavkoff’s hopes of keeping the rest of the conference together rested on finding a new and lucrative television deal. But conference presidents badly misread the environment. They aimed too high and then saw the Big 12 jump ahead of the Pac-12 in line by signing its extension with ESPN and Fox. Kliavkoff tried to salvage and sell an Apple TV+ deal to the conference, but it wasn’t enough as schools left for the Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC.

In recent months, Kliavkoff continued to represent the Pac-12 in meetings, including College Football Playoff management committee gatherings. He also celebrated Washington’s run to the national championship game, which ended up rather bittersweet in the Pac-12’s final season as we know it.

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(Photo: Kirby Lee / USA Today)

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Nicole Auerbach

Nicole Auerbach covers college football and college basketball for The Athletic. A leading voice in college sports, she also serves as a studio analyst for the Big Ten Network and a radio host for SiriusXM. Nicole was named the 2020 National Sports Writer of the Year by the National Sports Media Association, becoming the youngest national winner of the prestigious award. Before joining The Athletic, she covered college football and college basketball for USA Today. Follow Nicole on Twitter @NicoleAuerbach