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ACC teams already have a permanent crossover...a must do to preserve rivalries like FSU-Miami, North Carolina-NC State. Then add in a permanent in-state SEC rival like FSU, Clemson, Louisville, and GT have and Notre Dame every third year and there is not much room
Anyhoo...the Big Ten submitted a amendment that altered the proposed legislation that would allow a conference to match its two strongest teams...to one that left the current legislation almost intact...except letting a conference play a full round robin (Big 12 rule) and match the two best teams....
There will be no pods....not in the next 10 years.
From ESPN....
But what is most interesting is how this whole process played out. Most folks nationally shrugged their shoulders when the ACC first proposed the deregulation idea. What changed between March 2014 and November 2015, when the Big Ten decided the bigger conferences would be better off keeping a division format? While it is understandable that commissioners like Delany want as much uniformity as possible among Power 5 conferences, there is no way to get there.
Not when the SEC, ACC and Big Ten have 14 members, the Pac-12 has 12 and the Big 12 has 10.
Not when the SEC and ACC stay at eight conference games and the others have nine.
Not when the ACC has a unique scheduling partnership with Notre Dame. Not when the ACC and SEC have built in cross-conference rivalries that must always be played. Not when scheduling philosophies differ from conference to conference (to play or not to play FCS, that is the question!)
So what if the ACC wanted to potentially get rid of divisions somewhere down the line as a way to play league teams more often and determine its championship game the way it wants? In December, Delany told ESPN.com’s Heather Dinich, “I don't want unintended consequences. I don't want to wake up one morning and see some odd structure that's unfamiliar.”
That would be pods.
You seem to have a penchant for completely missing the point in posts you respond to. The two of us who mentioned pods mentioned it in the context of having two divisions in which each division's teams play each other. And the division winners play in the championship game. No semi-finals, no wild cards, etc. The only difference is that divisions change every year (or every other year). This does not appear to violate the current rules, and you made no attempt to show that was the case. Everything you quoted did not address the points we made and repeated information we already knew. The other point you blew off was that the crossover rivalries are preserved in my sample "pods." In fact, they wouldn't even be crossover. Again, for the umpeenth time, there will still be two divisions.