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Pat Forde offers up Covid-19 Realignment (SI.com)

Chris McLaughlin

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Feb 14, 2006
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marshall.rivals.com
Link: https://www.si.com/college/2020/06/29/ncaa-college-football-conference-realignment

America, Realigned: A Radical Reimagining of the NCAA Landscape
by Pat Forde, SI.com

Ten years ago this month, the last great spasm of realignment began shaking the college sports world. When it finally subsided in 2014, the landscape had changed dramatically. For the richer, but not necessarily for the better.

The Big Ten wound up with 14 teams, stretching from Nebraska to New Jersey. The Southeastern Conference expanded into Texas and Missouri. The Atlantic Coast Conference wandered nearly 1,000 miles inland. The Pac-12 annexed the Rocky Mountains. The Big 12, pushed to the brink of collapse, steadied itself by adding a school 1,200 miles to the northeast of the league office. Lesser conferences followed suit, scrambling for financial viability.

A decade later, it’s time to blow up what was done and start over. The COVID-19 pandemic’s effects have been profoundly felt in a realm where, for 10 years, money was no object and the map made no sense. Slapped in the face by a new fiscal reality, maybe we’re due to both rein in and reach out—to contract geographically into more regional conferences, while expanding the scope of the revenue gusher that is the College Football Playoff.

The radical realignment highlights:

- A 120-school ecosystem, with 11 current FBS members relegated to FCS and one elevated from that level. Congratulations North Dakota State; condolences to UTEP, Texas State, UTSA, South Alabama, Louisiana-Monroe, Bowling Green, New Mexico State, San Jose State, Coastal Carolina, Troy and Liberty. (Relegation/elevation can be revisited every three seasons.)

- Ten leagues, with 12 members each, each designed to maximize proximity and reduce travel demands and costs. All current conference structures are broken and reassembled. There are no more than eight Power 5 programs in a single new conference, and no fewer than four. And there are no independents -- yes, Notre Dame is in a conference.

- In football, each school will play a full round-robin schedule plus one non-conference game (no FCS opponents). The nonconference opponent will be locked in for a minimum of four seasons before there is an opt-out to schedule someone different. There will be no conference championship games.

- All 10 conference champions, plus two at-large teams chosen by a selection committee, advance to the expanded College Football Playoff. The teams are seeded by the committee. The top four receive a first-round bye, while seeds 5-8 host seeds 9-12 at their home stadiums the first weekend in December. Quarterfinals are played the next week at the home stadiums of seeds 1-4. The semifinals and championship game are conducted under the current CFP format.

- There still will be bowl games for the teams that don't make the CFP. Just fewer of them, which nobody should mind.

- The conferences will work for basketball and other sports as well -- in fact, it will be better for nonrevenue sports in terms of travel cost savings. The 230-odd non-FBS programs that are part of NCAA Division I will remain aligned pretty much where they already are, with a few exceptions.

The leagues:

Deep South
Alabama-Birmingham
Central Florida
Florida
Florida Atlantic
Florida International
Florida State
Georgia
Georgia Southern
Georgia State
Georgia Tech
Miami (FL)
South Florida

Great Mideast
Akron
Ball State
Cincinnati
Indiana
Kent State
Miami (OH)
Michigan
Michigan State
Ohio
Ohio State
Purdue
Toledo

Great Midwest
Central Michigan
Eastern Michigan
Iowa
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas State
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska
North Dakota State
Western Michigan
Wisconsin

Mid-American
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisville
Marshall
Middle Tennessee State
Northern Illinois
Northwestern
Notre Dame
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Western Kentucky
West Virginia

Mid-Atlantic
Appalachian State
Charlotte
Clemson
Duke
East Carolina
North Carolina
North Carolina State
Old Dominion
South Carolina
Virginia
Virginia Tech
Wake Forest

Pac-12
California
Fresno State
Hawaii
Nevada
Oregon
Oregon State
San Diego State
Stanford
UCLA
USC
Washington
Washington State

Rocky Mountain
Air Force
Arizona
Arizona State
Boise State
BYU
Colorado
Colorado State
New Mexico
UNLV
Utah
Utah State
Wyoming

Southwest
Baylor
Houston
North Texas
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Rice
Southern Methodist
TCU
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas Tech
Tulsa

Sun Belt
Alabama
Arkansas
Arkansas State
Auburn
Louisiana-Lafayette
Louisiana Tech
LSU
Memphis
Mississippi
Mississippi State
Southern Mississippi
Tulane

Yankee
Army
Boston College
Buffalo
Connecticut
Maryland
Massachusetts
Navy
Penn State
Rutgers
Pittsburgh
Syracuse
Temple

Marshall’s designated non-conference opponent would be Ohio.
 
Link: https://www.si.com/college/2020/06/29/ncaa-college-football-conference-realignment

America, Realigned: A Radical Reimagining of the NCAA Landscape
by Pat Forde, SI.com

Ten years ago this month, the last great spasm of realignment began shaking the college sports world. When it finally subsided in 2014, the landscape had changed dramatically. For the richer, but not necessarily for the better.

The Big Ten wound up with 14 teams, stretching from Nebraska to New Jersey. The Southeastern Conference expanded into Texas and Missouri. The Atlantic Coast Conference wandered nearly 1,000 miles inland. The Pac-12 annexed the Rocky Mountains. The Big 12, pushed to the brink of collapse, steadied itself by adding a school 1,200 miles to the northeast of the league office. Lesser conferences followed suit, scrambling for financial viability.

A decade later, it’s time to blow up what was done and start over. The COVID-19 pandemic’s effects have been profoundly felt in a realm where, for 10 years, money was no object and the map made no sense. Slapped in the face by a new fiscal reality, maybe we’re due to both rein in and reach out—to contract geographically into more regional conferences, while expanding the scope of the revenue gusher that is the College Football Playoff.

The radical realignment highlights:

- A 120-school ecosystem, with 11 current FBS members relegated to FCS and one elevated from that level. Congratulations North Dakota State; condolences to UTEP, Texas State, UTSA, South Alabama, Louisiana-Monroe, Bowling Green, New Mexico State, San Jose State, Coastal Carolina, Troy and Liberty. (Relegation/elevation can be revisited every three seasons.)

- Ten leagues, with 12 members each, each designed to maximize proximity and reduce travel demands and costs. All current conference structures are broken and reassembled. There are no more than eight Power 5 programs in a single new conference, and no fewer than four. And there are no independents -- yes, Notre Dame is in a conference.

- In football, each school will play a full round-robin schedule plus one non-conference game (no FCS opponents). The nonconference opponent will be locked in for a minimum of four seasons before there is an opt-out to schedule someone different. There will be no conference championship games.

- All 10 conference champions, plus two at-large teams chosen by a selection committee, advance to the expanded College Football Playoff. The teams are seeded by the committee. The top four receive a first-round bye, while seeds 5-8 host seeds 9-12 at their home stadiums the first weekend in December. Quarterfinals are played the next week at the home stadiums of seeds 1-4. The semifinals and championship game are conducted under the current CFP format.

- There still will be bowl games for the teams that don't make the CFP. Just fewer of them, which nobody should mind.

- The conferences will work for basketball and other sports as well -- in fact, it will be better for nonrevenue sports in terms of travel cost savings. The 230-odd non-FBS programs that are part of NCAA Division I will remain aligned pretty much where they already are, with a few exceptions.

The leagues:

Deep South
Alabama-Birmingham
Central Florida
Florida
Florida Atlantic
Florida International
Florida State
Georgia
Georgia Southern
Georgia State
Georgia Tech
Miami (FL)
South Florida

Great Mideast
Akron
Ball State
Cincinnati
Indiana
Kent State
Miami (OH)
Michigan
Michigan State
Ohio
Ohio State
Purdue
Toledo

Great Midwest
Central Michigan
Eastern Michigan
Iowa
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas State
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska
North Dakota State
Western Michigan
Wisconsin

Mid-American
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisville
Marshall
Middle Tennessee State
Northern Illinois
Northwestern
Notre Dame
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Western Kentucky
West Virginia

Mid-Atlantic
Appalachian State
Charlotte
Clemson
Duke
East Carolina
North Carolina
North Carolina State
Old Dominion
South Carolina
Virginia
Virginia Tech
Wake Forest

Pac-12
California
Fresno State
Hawaii
Nevada
Oregon
Oregon State
San Diego State
Stanford
UCLA
USC
Washington
Washington State

Rocky Mountain
Air Force
Arizona
Arizona State
Boise State
BYU
Colorado
Colorado State
New Mexico
UNLV
Utah
Utah State
Wyoming

Southwest
Baylor
Houston
North Texas
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Rice
Southern Methodist
TCU
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas Tech
Tulsa

Sun Belt
Alabama
Arkansas
Arkansas State
Auburn
Louisiana-Lafayette
Louisiana Tech
LSU
Memphis
Mississippi
Mississippi State
Southern Mississippi
Tulane

Yankee
Army
Boston College
Buffalo
Connecticut
Maryland
Massachusetts
Navy
Penn State
Rutgers
Pittsburgh
Syracuse
Temple

Marshall’s designated non-conference opponent would be Ohio.
Marshall may not win very many football games, let alone a conference championship, under this setup , but, by damn, this would be an exciting football schedule. I'm in.
 
Marshall may not win very many football games, let alone a conference championship, under this setup , but, by damn, this would be an exciting football schedule. I'm in.
I’d take it. Not many conference championships over the past 20 years anyways.
 
I like the teams listed in The Mid-American....HOWEVER from what I've seen in approx. 55 years (since 1965) I can't see MU ever having a winning season with these opponents (ESPECIALLY FOOTBALL & BASKETBALL) unless our recruiting would vastly improve (due to the competition listed, etc.).
 
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TL;DR SUMMARY: a solution to a problem that doesn't really affect P5 would be to mix P5 and G5 generously, share the revenues evenly between between, renegotiate the TV contracts so CBS still pays the same for Florida/UAB as they did for Florida/Alabama, renegotiate the advertising deal with Nissan so they pay CBS the same for spots in that game, renegotiate the sales receipt from the purchase of a new Nissan so that it costs the same as a Mercedes, renegotiate my salary with my employer so I can afford a Benz, and finally, renegotiate gravity with God so that heavy things fall upward.

I want to start a charity where, for the remainder of the COVID epidemic, we send sportswriters into poor communities to build affordable housing. Give them something to do other than vomitting pancake batter and circus peanuts all over the internet, waiting for sports to come back.
 
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