This isn’t exactly breaking news but the Southeastern Conference made a ton of money during the league’s latest fiscal year.

After pulling in $624.2 million in the previous fiscal year, the SEC announced on Thursday that the league brought in $651 million of total revenue for the 2018-19 fiscal year.

Split between the 14 league institutions, that breaks down to over $44.6 million per school.

According to the SEC, this total comes from revenue collected from television agreements, bowl games, the College Football Playoff, the SEC Football Championship, the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament, NCAA Championships and a supplemental surplus distribution.

“The revenue distributed through the Southeastern Conference enables our 14 member universities to provide unparalleled support to their student-athletes through superior instruction, training, equipment, academic counseling, medical care, mental health and wellness support and life-skills development,” said SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey in a released statement. “It is this sustained conference-wide commitment to the student-athlete experience that makes this conference sound and its impact so meaningful.

“In addition to supporting the overall student-athlete experience, revenues generated through SEC athletics can contribute in significant ways to the academic missions of the Conference’s 14 universities. These distributions provide each university the opportunity to make a positive impact on their respective campuses in ways unique to each institution.  Past uses of this revenue on our campuses have included participation in the construction and renovation of academic facilities, support of academic scholarship opportunities, funding of academic programs and direct transfers of funds to support academic budgets.”

Needless to say, it’s good to be the SEC.