Friday, May 15, 2026

FSU Shoots Back at ACC with Fiery Amended Complaint

  • FSU fired back at the ACC with an amended complaint.
  • The university opposes confidentiality claims while throwing blame at the former commissioner.
FSU
USA TODAY

FSU roared back twelve days after the ACC said it wanted to keep the university out of conference affairs during the two sides’ ongoing legal battle.

The FSU Board of Trustees filed an amended complaint on Monday that publicly addressed the ACC lawsuit for the first time and provided unflattering details surrounding longtime commissioner John Swofford, who served from 1997 to 2021. The new complaint filed in Florida is 21 pages longer than the original from December and stems from the school’s wish to avoid a $572 million payment to exit the conference.

Most significantly, a new section entitled “The ACC Files an Unprovoked Lawsuit against Its Member” acknowledges the ACC’s legal action, calling the matter the “Unprovoked ACC Complaint.”

FSU says its board of trustees (the subject of the ACC’s lawsuit and the plaintiffs in this one) never entered a contract with the conference. FSU says the conference has changed its course since the Maryland lawsuit, throwing around words like “duties” and “obligations” that do not exist in the conference constitution or bylaws. FSU claims the ACC skirted rules set out in its constitution that notice must be given, a meeting must be held, and a two-thirds majority vote must be cast before the conference takes legal action, a procedure that it says went down before the Maryland lawsuit.

In another new section called “The ACC Has No Confidentiality Arrangement or Agreement with Its Members, FSU opposes a claim made by the ACC that it violated confidentiality agreements by openly discussing media rights negotiations and agreements. The board of trustees and the school have never been asked to sign a confidentiality agreement by the conference or ESPN, FSU says. All the Grant of Rights and media rights agreements are actually public records in Florida, FSU holds.

Plus, the school stated in the other new section that the conference violated the confidentiality agreements it claims exist by disclosing media rights details in the lawsuit.

Coming Down Hard On Former Commissioner

In addition to the new sections, FSU filled in gaps in its initial complaint with more details explaining how the ACC may have come to the media rights decisions it did under Swofford’s leadership.

The university outlined ways Swofford worked to keep North Carolina-based Raycom Sports, which had held rights for the ACC and SEC before the latter went to ESPN, afloat. Swofford’s son, Chad Swofford (who had worked at Boston College when the ACC invited them to the conference), took a job with Raycom Sports in 2007. That personal relationship led to less competitive media rights negotiations incorporating both Raycom and EPSN that didn’t pay out member schools at the same levels as other conferences’ deals, FSU claims.

“It’s rather surprising that a conference would so willingly take less TV money—the core source of revenue in collegiate athletics—just to keep a broadcast company from folding,” reads a Forbes article quoted in the complaint.

Realizing what happened, the conference moved to keep schools from jumping ship in a progressively more intense Grant of Rights agreement, FSU claims. The board of trustees says its members were cornered in individual meetings by Swofford and his media consultant and told the conference would work with ESPN to get the schools more money and had reached the “same terms and conditions” for a prestige network as the SEC, both of which the university says didn’t happen.

FSU claims the media rights mishandlings, including Raycom Sports giving a portion of games to Fox Sports Net instead of ESPN, delayed an ACC prestige network and making member schools pay more than other conferences to get the network up and running.

FSU held its unfavorable position toward the ACC’s new members, adding a chart claiming its viewership vastly outnumbers Cal, Stanford, and SMU.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Jul 29, 2025; Montreal, QC, Canada; Maya Joint (AUS) reacts after scoring a point against Leylah Fernandez (CAN) in first round play at IGA Stadium.

NCAA Proposes Prize Money Rule Change After Landmark Settlement

The change would allow players to accept prize money without affecting eligibility.
Mar 29, 2026; Washington, DC, USA; UConn Huskies guard Braylon Mullins (24) celebrates after making the game-winning three-point basket against the Duke Blue Devils in the second half during an Elite Eight game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena

Braylon Mullins Waiting to Cash In On Game-Winning Shot

Mullins is holding off on NIL opportunities until the Huskies’ season ends.

Brett Yormark and Cody Campbell Fight Over Who Runs Big 12

“He is not the dictator of the conference. That’s not his role.”

Iowa State Star Audi Crooks Enters Transfer Portal

Crooks, an Iowa native, has one year of eligibility remaining.

Featured Today

‘The Sonics Never Died’: The Long Afterlife of Seattle NBA Merch

Inside “the largest team shop for a team that doesn’t exist.” 
Mar 27, 2026; Washington, DC, USA;UConn Huskies forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) dunks the ball against the Michigan State Spartans in the second half during a Sweet Sixteen game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena
March 28, 2026

March Madness Coaches Debate ‘Blueblood’ in NIL Era

The term’s meaning was up for debate at men’s March Madness.
Maxime Vachier Lagrave
March 25, 2026

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

Chess’s most prestigious tournament is battling a splashy Saudi event.
Beau Brune/LSU
March 22, 2026

College Athletic Departments Are Becoming Media Companies

“There’s only so many tickets you can sell, but content is infinite.”

NCAA Is Trying to Close NBA Draft Eligibility Loophole

If passed, the rules will be implemented by the next academic year.
April 1, 2026

The European Agent Behind the Illinois Final Four Run

Miško Ražnatović represents four of the Illinois “Balkan Five.” 
April 1, 2026

Why a Furniture Store Is Risking $50M on UConn Basketball

Jordan’s Furniture will refund purchases if both Huskies teams make the final.
Sponsored

Baseball Is Back: MLB Opening Day Prices Soar

MLB Opening Day ticket prices are at record highs. TickPick data breaks down demand, pricing trends, and where fans are paying the most.
March 30, 2026

Top Seeds Sweep Women’s Final Four As 2025 Teams All Return

It’s the first repeat Final Four in 30 years.
exclusive
March 30, 2026

Alabama, Nebraska, Michigan Spent Most on CFB Private Jet Travel

Texas A&M spent $493,000 on coach Mike Elko’s travel alone.
March 29, 2026

UConn Men, Women Reach Final Four Despite Financial Pressures

UConn men and women both reach Final Four in rare feat.
Mar 27, 2026; Washington, DC, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) attempts to dribble the ball past St. John's Red Storm forward Bryce Hopkins (23) in the first half during a Sweet Sixteen game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena
March 27, 2026

Duke vs. St. John’s: The Battle of Dueling Roster Strategies

In the “unrestricted free agency” era, the Blue Devils won out.