When the SEC Network launched last summer, it was a landmark moment for the conference. The SEC was already the most popular conference by any variety of metrics, and the creation of a network devoted solely to the conference was only further validation of that.

The SEC joined the Big Ten and Pac-12 as conferences with their own television channels. In under a year of operation, SEC Network has already soared past its competition. (Big Ten Network has been on air since 2007, while the Pac-12 Network has been broadcasting since 2012.)

Last week, Fox Sports’ Clay Travis published his rankings of the 15 most valuable sports networks, and in just nine months, SEC Network has already cracked the top five.

Here are Travis’ rankings and the values of each network. The values were determined by multiplying the monthly subscriber fee by 12 (months), then multiplying that total by the number of households that carry each network.

1. ESPN, $7.5 billion
2. NFL Network, $1.16 billion
3. Fox Sports 1, $1.08 billion
4. ESPN2, $941.2 million
5. SEC Network, $547.3 million
6. Golf Channel, $332.2 million
7. NBC Sports Network, $299 million
8. Big Ten Network, $290.2 million
9. MLB Network, $222.5 million
10. Fox Sports 2, $215 million
11. NBATV, $199 million
12. ESPNU, $198 million
13. CBS Sports Network, $190.3 million
14. NHL Network, $143.6 million
15. Pac-12 Network, $57.6 million

Note: Per Travis, the figures are based on 2015 end-of-year subscribers from media research company SNL Kagan. Not included in Travis’ rankings were the Turner channels, TBS and TNT, both of which carry extensive sports programming in a variety of sports. 

SEC Network’s position in the rankings should come as no surprise when considering the network charges the fifth-highest subscriber fee of any channel listed, at $0.66. ESPN (which owns SEC Network) charges the highest subscription fee at $6.61, by comparison, with NFL Network as the only other channel with a monthly subscriber fee of more than $1.

Already, SEC Network has sprinted past its competition amongst conference-specific networks, including Texas’ Longhorn Network, also owned by ESPN, which didn’t make the rankings. SEC Network is in 69.1 million homes already, seven million more than the Big Ten channel and five times more than the Pac-12 Network’s 12.3 million homes.

Part of the SEC channel’s value could be derived from its affiliation with its parent company, ESPN. The Worldwide Leader has four networks under its umbrella that crack Travis’ rankings.

As you can see, SEC Network’s worth is already nearly as much as the MLB, NBA and NHL channels combined (although it is dwarfed by NFL Network), another strong validation of the conference’s popularity.

SEC Network is already paying dividends for the conference’s members. In February, South Carolina athletic director Ray Tanner gave a conservative estimate that each school would receive at least $5 million in revenue from the network.

Combined with an estimated $87.5 million paid out to the conference from the College Football Playoff games alone and record-high TV revenue announced last year, and the going is good for the SEC when it comes to television.