We told you earlier this summer it was happening.

The SEC isn’t college football’s only money-printing machine.

The Big Ten has joined the SEC in pushing away others in college football with increased cash, a sign of just how dominant these two Power 5s are becoming thanks to TV contracts and the addition of the College Football Playoff leading to revenue boosts.

According to the Lafayette Journal and Courier, Purdue recently received a payout of $32 million from the Big Ten — about $5 million more than the last fiscal year.

Revenue from bowl games, the CFP and the Big Ten Network resulted in the dramatic increase, a figure that’s nearly $12 million more than Florida State received from the ACC by comparison.

Not bad for a team that’s managed only one winning season since 2008.

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The report states that the Big Ten’s newest members – Maryland, Nebraska and Rutgers – are “operating under a six-year financial integration plan and not expected to receive BTN profit shares.”

The Big 12, ACC and SEC also reported record high revenue streams in the most recent fiscal year thanks to TV contracts and the College Football Playoff as contributing factors.

The SEC handed out a record-setting $435 million in revenue split evenly to its 14 schools, a nearly $300 million increase from the pre-SEC Network era. Much of that cash was directly linked to the success of the league’s new channel over the first nine months of its existence.

The SEC handed out a record $31.07 million in revenue to each of its 14 schools.