Boise State and the Mountain 
West announced Monday they had come to an agreement to keep the Broncos 
playing in the league they have been a part of the past two seasons.
“Without question, conference 
affiliation has been an odyssey for Boise State, with all the unexpected
 turns and changes that term suggests,” Boise State University President
 Robert Kustra said in statement. “The benefits of geographic footprint,
 revenue, and national exposure have to be balanced against the changing
 circumstances of conference realignment. I am confident that our 
Mountain West membership is the very best decision for Boise State 
University, our student-athletes and our incredible fan base.”
Boise State, which left the 
Western Athletic Conference for the Mountain West after the 2010 season,
 is still on the hook to pay a $5 million exit fee to the Big East, 
though the school says there are “provisions” that could make it less. 
Mountain West Commissioner Craig Thompson said the conference will help 
Boise State pay its exit fee.
The Broncos were scheduled to 
join the Big East next year for football only. Boise State’s other 
sports were going to compete in the Big West. But more recent defections
 from the Big East made Boise State reconsider. And the Broncos were 
able to cut a sweet deal with the Mountain West that could allow Boise 
State to cash in on its popular and perennially powerful football 
program.
The Mountain West recently 
restructured its television deal with CBS Sports Network to allow the 
conference to sell games to other national networks. The deal, which 
runs through the 2015-16 season, will net a $300,000 bonus for schools 
that appear on ESPN, ESPN2, NBC, CBS or Fox, with an additional bonus of
 $200,000 for a Saturday game.
Under its new agreement with the
 Mountain West, Boise State home football games will not be part of the 
current or future Mountain West television rights contracts, Kustra 
said. The school’s home games will be sold separately by the conference 
and the university and revenue will be distributed among league members.
 But Boise State can make extra money by being on national television 
more often than its conference mates.
 
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