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Pac-12 After Dark 2014-2023
- Feb 7, 2010
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I think they should just go all March madness and have the top 68 teams play knockout (with a first 4 play in). At this rate that's where we'll end upThe playoffs is killing the sport.
Best case scenario IMO is to go down the Chip Kelly route whereby you have a Power 64 teams and a Group of 64 teams and go back to regionality with a centralised office.
Funny thing is we had that about 10 years ago
Clemson have officially filed a suit against the ACC and the Grant of Rights. We all knew this was coming once FSU jumped first.
You campaigners are the ones who have killed it with greed and the conference realignment based on money. its not the players who want to fly cross country now every few weeks rather then just 1 state over. CFB wont feel the same with all the rivalries that have been killed.One league overseeing college football’s highest level. No more conferences as we’ve known them. Playoff berths being decided solely on the field. Promotion and relegation for smaller schools. Players being paid directly. NIL and the transfer portal, managed.
A group of influential leaders wants to make all this happen soon — and they are pitching it as the best way forward for a sport they believe needs saving.
They are trying to implement a drastically new system that would replace the NCAA and the College Football Playoff and potentially provide a solution for the hurricane of current and future lawsuits aimed at the business of the sport, plus the NIL and transfer portal issues that, they believe, have put college athletics as a whole in peril.
The current CST outline would create a system that would have the top 70 programs — all members of the five former major conferences, plus Notre Dame and new ACC member SMU — as permanent members and encompass all 130-plus FBS universities.
The perpetual members would be in seven 10-team divisions, joined by an eighth division of teams that would be promoted from the second tier.
The 50-plus second-division teams would have the opportunity to compete their way into the upper division, creating a promotion system similar to the structure in European football leagues. The 70 permanent teams would never be in danger of moving down, while the second division would have the incentive of promotion and relegation.
The playoffs would not require a selection committee, as the eight division winners and eight wild cards from the top tier would go to the postseason. The wild-card spots would be determined by record and tiebreakers, much like the NFL.
Yeah the big schools are not taking TV deal pay cuts to have this. that was what was behind the last realignment.Thus far, the group is struggling to gain traction with the schools that would play in their proposed “Super League.” The ACC board of directors heard a presentation from the group in February. However, planned dinners with administrators from the Big Ten, SEC and Big 12 all were called off. Spokespersons for the Big Ten and SEC said commissioners Petitti and Greg Sankey, respectively, have not met with Perna’s group.
Leagues have been hesitant and canceled meetings so as not to upset their current broadcast partners, including ESPN and Fox, according to one executive briefed on the commissioners’ thoughts.
Chief among the obstacles this new venture faces are the billions of dollars in TV deals that all the top conferences have locked in with the major networks: ESPN/ABC, Fox, NBC and CBS. The FBS conferences recently signed off on a six-year, $7.8 billion extension with ESPN for the exclusive rights to the expanded College Football Playoff.
The Big Ten’s deals run through the 2029-30 season, the Big 12’s run through 2030-31 and the SEC’s exclusive deal with ESPN runs through 2033-34. One TV executive called the idea that there is a lot more untapped money in the market “naive.” One CST executive said that the major networks with existing deals would likely need to buy into the plan before it could go to the open market in the 2030s.
Universities would own a percentage of the league, a model derived from MLS where it was devised by former president Mark Abbott, who is involved with CST. Unlike the soccer league, the revenue distribution would not be an even split among all competitors, as top brands like Alabama and Notre Dame would receive more of the financial pie. CST believes there would be added value in negotiating TV deals as one entity and creating broadcast windows that make more sense, much like the NFL’s approach.
It was clear from the start. Now its going to just keep getting better if the Buffs have another poor season and Sanders doesnt end up pick 1.
It was never about the team. it was always all about "coach Prime" and his kids + Travis hunter. Everyone else is just filling out the numbers
I do love how Qunicy Avery, a bloke that has trained many CFB and NFL QBs responded to Deion with this:
Anyone who watches College knows Shedeur is nowhere near a first round QB but will still probably be taken near the top due to desperation for QBs at the top of the draft.