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The Big Five Conferences are going to break away

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Question for Frank or anyone in the know. Are the P5 interested in creating a new division/association for all sports, or just football?
 
Jim Calhoun in 2010:

"As far as the NCAA, I think the NCAA does work, to some degree, but I think it's just 356 schools all having too diverse ideas. My own personal opinion would be the fact that you're gonna see the top 125, 130 schools break away. Our goals and our mission, in many, many ways athletically and many times academically, is much different from the other schools. For example, there would only be about 110-20 schools that would vote for two more scholarships. The other 250 schools wouldn't vote that way because they can't afford it. That's not the situation at Connecticut, Duke, all the other schools, obviously. My point being simply is that you see it coming. The Big East is talking about it and it's eventually going to happen where you see possibly a separation there. … You're heading towards where I'd like to be heading toward, a simple set of mandates. I'm not backing out of anything or shirking responsibility. I am captain of the UConn ship, basketball-wise, and I accept full responsibility, but I can't be responsible when I rely upon my university, the NCAA and all of the Big East if things happen beyond my control. And quite frankly, the thing that happened with us, honestly, is a national epidemic. And that's quite frankly runners and agents. That's the thing that's inching its way into virtually every program."
 
Question for Frank or anyone in the know. Are the P5 interested in creating a new division/association for all sports, or just football?

The power 5 would likely threaten to split for all sports, but my guess is that it would just be for football. Essentially, there would be "Super FBS" (with the power leagues), FBS and FCS for football, which would all be Division I schools for basketball and other sports. So, I don't think the Georgetowns and Gonzagas of the world will be affected that much since they aren't playing FBS football - I believe basketball (and other sports) will remain largely intact. Football is really where the divide will be.
 
This split is being caused by the same reasons that caused the divisional split in 1978. Too many low level teams jumping into FBS football. There are way too many teams that want "big time" football (UNC Charlotte starting a team, App State moving from FCS to FBS, South Alabama moving to FBC, etc) that there is a huge disparity again between the Texas and OSU schools making over $100mil a year in athletics and the other schools losing money on athletics. Its time again to separate the schools that can pay their own way and those leaching off the system and pretending to be a big time program when there is no way they will ever be.

The P5 will likely end up getting a separate division in the NCAA that will allow them greater autonomy to be a "semi-professional" league (Stipends for players, lower likelihood of penalties, etc) and stop sharing the big revenues with the App states and South Alabama's of the world. They won't bar teams/conferences from joining them but the cost of entry will be much higher than most of the lower levels will be able to pay effectively keeping them out.

It might work to UCONN's favor as there will likely be enough schools outside of the P5 that will have the resources to fit into the new division. It likely wont be all of the AAC members (Tulane?) so I could see another conference forming that would consist of the G5 members that decide they want to move to the new division.
 
Will actual game attendance matter? Stadium size? Does anyone in the P5 leave voluntarily or get kicked out?

Will it be big state publics only?...plus ND. Does Miami finally get what's coming to them.

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The power 5 would likely threaten to split for all sports, but my guess is that it would just be for football. Essentially, there would be "Super FBS" (with the power leagues), FBS and FCS for football, which would all be Division I schools for basketball and other sports. So, I don't think the Georgetowns and Gonzagas of the world will be affected that much since they aren't playing FBS football - I believe basketball (and other sports) will remain largely intact. Football is really where the divide will be.

That would essentially shut down the FBS, bowls would cease to exist, and teams in the Other 5 would be forced (infringing on the free market), to drop back down to FCS where a "national championship" would mean exactly nothing.

Everything that you have proposed affects the free market. Worthy schools are excluded just because, and unworthy schools are taken along for the ride because...well...they always had been. It is the very definition that you laid out earlier for the basis for an anti-trust law suit. If a school can't or chooses not to achieve certain criteria (as with the split of D1A and D1AA), that's one thing, but the criteria should not be a moving target for one and not others.
 
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I think this crap gets floated for recruiting purposes, they want to scare recruits away from anyone not in the top 5. This is recruiting hardball.

You're delusional.

Do you really think the five power conferences are concocting this as a way to beat the outsiders for recruits?

Seriously?

Since they'll probably get just about every five-star recruit and all but a handful of four-star recruits, it seems a tad...far-fetched.
 
That would essentially shut down the FBS, bowls would cease to exist, and teams in the Other 5 would be forced (infringing on the free market), to drop back down to FCS where a "national championship" would mean exactly nothing.

Everything that you have proposed affects the free market. Worthy schools are excluded just because, and unworthy schools are taken along for the ride because...well...they always had been. It is the very definition that you laid out earlier for the basis for an anti-trust law suit. If a school can't or chooses not to achieve certain criteria (as with the split of D1A and D1AA, that's one thing, but the criteria not be a moving target for one and not others.



It happened in 1978 and it can/will happen again. Its likely that the rules wont be written to exclude other member as I described in my earlier post. They will be written so that the money that is required to compete will be so high that the schools themselves will elect not to compete. If the cost for competing in FB goes from $10 million now to $20 million in the future, a lot of low level schools will decide that they simply can't afford to play in that division anymore. Therefore, it will be free market.
The ones that decide they can will join however if bowls don't sign them (bowls sign up with individual conferences, and they don't get TV contracts (again conferences sign these) the disparity will still be there even if they are in the "super" division.
 
I am not a lawyer, but isnt this a form of anti-trust, particularly for public universities that fit the criteria. There is no way that UConn will be excluded. Lets not overreact to such lunacy.
 
It happened in 1978 and it can/will happen again. Its likely that the rules wont be written to exclude other member as I described in my earlier post. They will be written so that the money that is required to compete will be so high that the schools themselves will elect not to compete. If the cost for competing in FB goes from $10 million now to $20 million in the future, a lot of low level schools will decide that they simply can't afford to play in that division anymore. Therefore, it will be free market.
The ones that decide they can will join however if bowls don't sign them (bowls sign up with individual conferences, and they don't get TV contracts (again conferences sign these) the disparity will still be there even if they are in the "super" division.

Exactly. The split has occurred once before (and the biggest league affected at that time was arguably the Ivy League, which certainly doesn't have a shortage of legal experts). Whether one is "worthy" or "unworthy" is likely going to be determined by additional revenue and expense factors, which isn't any more unreasonable than the scholarship and attendance requirements between FBS and FCS today.
 
It happened in 1978 and it can/will happen again. Its likely that the rules wont be written to exclude other member as I described in my earlier post. They will be written so that the money that is required to compete will be so high that the schools themselves will elect not to compete. If the cost for competing in FB goes from $10 million now to $20 million in the future, a lot of low level schools will decide that they simply can't afford to play in that division anymore. Therefore, it will be free market.
The ones that decide they can will join however if bowls don't sign them (bowls sign up with individual conferences, and they don't get TV contracts (again conferences sign these) the disparity will still be there even if they are in the "super" division.

I don't see how this will be a negative for UConn. In fact, if the break includes all sports, this makes UConn more attractive than ever!
 
The power 5 would likely threaten to split for all sports, but my guess is that it would just be for football. Essentially, there would be "Super FBS" (with the power leagues), FBS and FCS for football, which would all be Division I schools for basketball and other sports. So, I don't think the Georgetowns and Gonzagas of the world will be affected that much since they aren't playing FBS football - I believe basketball (and other sports) will remain largely intact. Football is really where the divide will be.
frank,
I believe you are wrong about basketball, and maybe baseball too. It might start out as "football only" but I really can't believe that there won't be pressure for the same thing in those other sports, possibly the odd other sport that send guys to the pros such as mens hockey, too. They face much the same pressures and much the same issues really. so the question becomes how do you not provide full cost of attendance scholarships for those sports, too, and once you do that, how do non-Super conference teams compete. maybe a Georgetown or a Marquette or somebody goes along and also pays its players, but Providence and Seton Hall are barely hanging in there as it is. They can't go along with this. Not only that, but as we've seem in basketball already, the BCS leagues already pretty much dominate the sport. Last non-football school to win a national championship was UConn in 1999, who actually started its upgrade the following year. These schools have almost no chance as it is. In the new world order they'll have none what so ever.

I do think they are missing 2 things, though. first is the Title IX implications. Just because a sport isn't in the NCAA doesn't mean that it isn't covered by title IX.If those schools think they can get away by giving 85 football players stipends and not providing a comparable number to female athletes I think they will find they badly misunderestimated, as a former president might have put it. The second thing is that if they push this too far and become associated with the schools rather than part of the schools involved, I do think over time they run the risk of turning themselves into minor leagues. And quesry whether 100,000 folks will come to see a minor league football team, even if its called the Michigan Wolverines. Maybe at first, but over time there is a real risk that if the programs become too disengaged with their universities, they will lose the source of fans that made them. the final issue I think, is that at some point, the Presidents might need to weigh in on this. hell, Swofford practically taunted them with his comments about leaving athletics to the people who know this stuff. Bowlesby made similar comments. At some point, it wouldn't shock me to see at least a few of these guys decide that these ADs and Conference commissioners have forgotten for whom they are working and pull them up short.
 
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frank,
I believe you are wrong about basketball, and maybe baseball too. It might start out as "football only" but I really can't believe that there won't be pressure for the same thing in those other sports, possibly the odd other sport that send guys to the pros such as mens hockey, too. They face much the same pressures and much the same issues really. so the question becomes how do you not provide full cost of attendance scholarships for those sports, too, and once you do that, how do non-Super conference teams compete. maybe a Georgetown or a Marquette or somebody goes along and also pays its players, but Providence and Seton Hall are barely hanging in there as it is. They can't go along with this. Not only that, but as we've seem in basketball already, the BCS leagues already pretty much dominate the sport. Last non-football school to win a national championship was UConn in 1999, who actually started its upgrade the following year. These schools have almost no chance as it is. In the new world order they'll have none what so ever.

I do think they are missing 2 things, though. first is the Title IX implications. Just because a sport isn't in the NCAA doesn't mean that it isn't covered by title IX.If those schools think they can get away by giving 85 football players stipends and not providing a comparable number to female athletes I think they will find they badly misunderestimated, as a former president might have put it. The second thing is that if they push this too far and become associated with the schools rather than part of the schools involved, I do think over time they run the risk of turning themselves into minor leagues. And quesry whether 100,000 folks will come to see a minor league football team, even if its called the Michigan Wolverines. Maybe at first, but over time there is a real risk that if the programs become too disengaged with their universities, they will lose the source of fans that made them. the final issue I think, is that at some point, the Presidents might need to weigh in on this. hell, Swofford practically taunted them with his comments about leaving athletics to the people who know this stuff. Bowlesby made similar comments. At some point, it wouldn't shock me to see at least a few of these guys decide that these ADs and Conference commissioners have forgotten for whom they are working and pull them up short.

I gave you a like because we can't like our own posts and your 2nd graph say almost exactly what I did a page or so earlier. :D
 
It will be FB only. It is the inevitable migration in power FB thinking from Why should we share with lesser conferences to Why should we share with lesser teams in our own conferences.

For certain it won't be a neat and tidy evolution.

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This split is being caused by the same reasons that caused the divisional split in 1978. Too many low level teams jumping into FBS football. There are way too many teams that want "big time" football (UNC Charlotte starting a team, App State moving from FCS to FBS, South Alabama moving to FBC, etc) that there is a huge disparity again between the Texas and OSU schools making over $100mil a year in athletics and the other schools losing money on athletics. Its time again to separate the schools that can pay their own way and those leaching off the system and pretending to be a big time program when there is no way they will ever be.

The P5 will likely end up getting a separate division in the NCAA that will allow them greater autonomy to be a "semi-professional" league (Stipends for players, lower likelihood of penalties, etc) and stop sharing the big revenues with the App states and South Alabama's of the world. They won't bar teams/conferences from joining them but the cost of entry will be much higher than most of the lower levels will be able to pay effectively keeping them out.

It might work to UCONN's favor as there will likely be enough schools outside of the P5 that will have the resources to fit into the new division. It likely wont be all of the AAC members (Tulane?) so I could see another conference forming that would consist of the G5 members that decide they want to move to the new division.

Good post. And I have only one question as a big fan of college football and basketball. If this is a move to "semi-pro" football, why would I bother watching on Saturdays when I could watch the real thing on Sundays? I really do think college football and basketball run the risk of being NFL and NBA light and losing the differentiation that has made it such a compelling draw.
 
frank,
I believe you are wrong about basketball, and maybe baseball too. It might start out as "football only" but I really can't believe that there won't be pressure for the same thing in those other sports, possibly the odd other sport that send guys to the pros such as mens hockey, too. They face much the same pressures and much the same issues really ...

Not exactly. Pro hockey and baseball systems can draft directly from the high school levels. There are restrictions on who can be drafted for basketball (1 year removed from graduation) and football (3 years). Plus, baseball and hockey are not revenue generators on the same level as bb and fb.
 
Good post. And I have only one question as a big fan of college football and basketball. If this is a move to "semi-pro" football, why would I bother watching on Saturdays when I could watch the real thing on Sundays? I really do think college football and basketball run the risk of being NFL and NBA light and losing the differentiation that has made it such a compelling draw.

Do you watch the NBDL? Did you watch the UFL? The answer is you wouldn't bother with college sports.
 
There's always this assumption from laypeople that there could be an antitrust lawsuit in college football (whether it's with respect to the playoff system or a split of the conferences), but they're making a wrong assumption about American antitrust law. That is, they mistakenly believe that American antitrust law is set up to preserve competition in and of itself, but the reality is that American antitrust law is to preserve the free market.

Not that it affects your argument about the difficulty of establishing an antitrust case (which I agree would be difficult but for reasons relating to the definition of the market and proof of anti-competitive effect), but this is simply not a true statement. U.S. Antitrust laws are entirely about preserving competition -- namely by correcting anomalies in the free market that limit competition.
 
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Good post. And I have only one question as a big fan of college football and basketball. If this is a move to "semi-pro" football, why would I bother watching on Saturdays when I could watch the real thing on Sundays? I really do think college football and basketball run the risk of being NFL and NBA light and losing the differentiation that has made it such a compelling draw.



College already is semi pro, they just don't get paid for it. Changing up the rules to allow payments wont change that fact.

My other response is, people will still be watching on Thursdays, Saturdays or any other day because of one overriding factor. A lot of college sports fans have a attachment to their team that a pro team doesn't have, they went to the university/college and their success is a point of pride. I will always be happier with my university's success than any pro team simply because I am a part of that university. There are millions of alumni who feel the same way and give lots of money to support their teams winning. Giving money to players wont change that. That alone will continue to drive the popularity of college sport whether they are amateur or semi pro.
 
Good post. And I have only one question as a big fan of college football and basketball. If this is a move to "semi-pro" football, why would I bother watching on Saturdays when I could watch the real thing on Sundays? I really do think college football and basketball run the risk of being NFL and NBA light and losing the differentiation that has made it such a compelling draw.

If people were concerned about the veil of college amateurism getting pierced, then they would have stopped watching college sports a looooong time ago. SMU certainly didn't invent the pro-type infusion of money into college sports and that scandal occurred 30 years ago.

So, I don't think that there's a general public problem with the "semi-pro" model of college football and basketball. That atmosphere has existed for a long time yet that hasn't dampened interest. It's more a micro-problem for each school's fan base: if your school isn't part of that power group, are you still going to watch your school with the same fervor? Remember that most people in America don't have a college degree and most people that have college degrees didn't attend a Division I school (and a further smaller percentage attended a power conference school). The general viewing audience only wants/has time to pay attention to a smaller subset of college football teams each week (much like the NFL) and that's who the TV networks care about (as that's a much larger base to draw from than people that actually attended these schools).
 
It will be FB only. It is the inevitable migration in power FB thinking from Why should we share with lesser conferences to Why should we share with lesser teams in our own conferences.

For certain it won't be a neat and tidy evolution.

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Yes it will be football only. Just like in 1978 when it was football only. Basketball is little different. For one, the NCAA actually controls the post season tournament for BB unlike FB where the conferences control the tournament. Second, the inclusion of lesser teams in the NCAAT actually helps ratings (Cinderella teams) and provides more inventory (games) for the TV contract.
 
Well, that's part of the dilemma of the split. Let's put it this way: I don't think that the power conferences are going to do a split where the AAC and/or MWC tag along. That almost defeats the purpose of the split - that's a lot of work if only the Sun Belt, MAC and C-USA end up getting effectively relegated. This is completely about structurally institutionalizing a separate division of 5 power conferences and a handful of chosen others (where that division has already existed in practicality).

BYU is an interesting case because they have a lot more political power than the average school. They (along with the service academies, who effectively have full cost of attendance, anyway) would probably end up in the Super FBS division as long as they're independent. Where it gets tricky is if any of them are in Group of Five conferences (as Air Force is and Navy will be). Conferences mean quite a bit in being able to go from division to division in college sports - you can't move up to FBS from FCS unless an FBS conference has a spot for you and I'd assume that would be the same case in trying to move from "normal" FBS to Super FBS. Just because a FCS school meets the requirements of being an FBS school doesn't mean that it can automatically move up - that school still needs a conference home. There hasn't ever been any legal challenge to that format and it's doubtful a viable argument against it exists. Likewise, UConn, Boise State and others that might be able to cover the full cost of attendance aren't necessarily going to find refuge unless a power conference is willing to take them.

So, it makes it very critical to be in the Super FBS from day one because there will likely be requirements beyond just the full cost of attendance (such as revenue requirements in lieu of attendance requirements that would effectively make it impossible for any school to move from FBS to Super FBS unless you're at least a BYU-type, if not a Notre Dame-type).

The upshot: expect the power conferences to put rules into place that will ensure that only they and a very small handful that can survive as independents get in. For UConn's sake, you should hope that Bob Bowlsby is only blowing smoke about the Big 12 wanting to only stay at 10 members.
Can you name a school in NCAA history that has met every criteria for competing at a certain level and getting forced down to a lower level against their will. I just don't see how Uconn is forced to a lower level without MAJOR pushback from Congress, Uconn, The State of CT, or the taxpayers of CT.

I get the requirements angle. But, you do realize Uconn is in the top 35-40 programs at roughly $70M annually. There will be very few requirements uconn doesn't meet that others from the other 'Power' conferences meet.

I'm not suggesting the split won't happen. I am saying that there are about 5-10 schools (uconn, Boise, cincy, USF, and maybe Navy) that will be included in the big boy league along with ND and BYU.
 
Exactly. The split has occurred once before (and the biggest league affected at that time was arguably the Ivy League, which certainly doesn't have a shortage of legal experts). Whether one is "worthy" or "unworthy" is likely going to be determined by additional revenue and expense factors, which isn't any more unreasonable than the scholarship and attendance requirements between FBS and FCS today.

That's why UCONN will most likely benefit if the split is under the umbrella of the NCAA. The NCAA will have to establish a set of criteria to separate the divisions as they have in the past. While UCONN may not be a top 20 program, it has the resources, metrics and budgets that surpass schools currently in the P5 conferences.
 
Exactly. The split has occurred once before (and the biggest league affected at that time was arguably the Ivy League, which certainly doesn't have a shortage of legal experts). Whether one is "worthy" or "unworthy" is likely going to be determined by additional revenue and expense factors, which isn't any more unreasonable than the scholarship and attendance requirements between FBS and FCS today.
exactly... the Ivy league 'decided' not to provide scholarships to its athletes. different from uconn's position where it could be forced down to a lower level.
 
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frank .... is arguing that NOTHING has impeded the P5 to this point.

Simply not true. And, he protests too much about Anti-trust legislation. Fact is ... we have ONE really Big impediment that can play out outside the court system. It has been impacted already by Utah senators. And, you can expect that where this is going is NOT simple. It is the argument Blumenthal made (with others back in 2003). You simply cannot exclude a class of smaller states ... and leave no capacity to "join the club" as your University grows (look at UCF and USF going beyond 50,000) ... and leave no ability to rise to compete. I think the Bully Pulpit is there for an argument for an Open system. And the P5 don't want it. Old Dominion can pass Wake in a heartbeat with one ... Bobby Petrino or a Peterson.

What are the P5 doing as well? Trying to NOT be inclusive in the Playoff. We know the Playoff will be 8. A few good Boise teams ... or more ACC defeats proves that the P5 is a paper Tiger. That, in this sport, you can lock out 65 programs ... and guarantee their losses will not sit well with lots of state legislators ... and then on a National level. It ain't about anti-trust and courts.
 
If people were concerned about the veil of college amateurism getting pierced, then they would have stopped watching college sports a looooong time ago. SMU certainly didn't invent the pro-type infusion of money into college sports and that scandal occurred 30 years ago.

So, I don't think that there's a general public problem with the "semi-pro" model of college football and basketball. That atmosphere has existed for a long time yet that hasn't dampened interest. It's more a micro-problem for each school's fan base: if your school isn't part of that power group, are you still going to watch your school with the same fervor? Remember that most people in America don't have a college degree and most people that have college degrees didn't attend a Division I school (and a further smaller percentage attended a power conference school). The general viewing audience only wants/has time to pay attention to a smaller subset of college football teams each week (much like the NFL) and that's who the TV networks care about (as that's a much larger base to draw from than people that actually attended these schools).
that's not really true. I think there is a huge difference in the optics of the situation if you move too far away from being a college team. it isn't the same as it is now. it isn't the same as what SMU did in 1980. That was cheating, not everyone knew about it and the team was successful. the nature of the beast changes dramatically when you come right out and pay players who may or may not bother going to class. Because, let's face it, that is a big part of this, too.
 
frank .... is arguing that NOTHING has impeded the P5 to this point.

Simply not true. And, he protests too much about Anti-trust legislation. Fact is ... we have ONE really Big impediment that can play out outside the court system. It has been impacted already by Utah senators. And, you can expect that where this is going is NOT simple. It is the argument Blumenthal made (with others back in 2003). You simply cannot exclude a class of smaller states ... and leave no capacity to "join the club" as your University grows (look at UCF and USF going beyond 50,000) ... and leave no ability to rise to compete. I think the Bully Pulpit is there for an argument for an Open system. And the P5 don't want it. Old Dominion can pass Wake in a heartbeat with one ... Bobby Petrino or a Peterson.

What are the P5 doing as well? Trying to NOT be inclusive in the Playoff. We know the Playoff will be 8. A few good Boise teams ... or more ACC defeats proves that the P5 is a paper Tiger. That, in this sport, you can lock out 65 programs ... and guarantee their losses will not sit well with lots of state legislators ... and then on a National level. It ain't about anti-trust and courts.


The new division will close that loophole. Teams wont be barred from joining the new division but the financial requirements will be so large that basically the P5 and some additional teams will be the only ones that have the finances to join the new division.
The playoff structure currently allows any team in the FBS to compete for the championship (including the G5) if they meet certain criteria. This will be the case in the new division as well except in your example ODU wouldn't be in the new division to compete because they likely wouldn't have the finances to be in the new division.

The free market tenets will be there in the new division. Anyone can join, anyone can compete for the championship. The cost of entry will be so high that only a select group will actually be able to do that though.
 
frank .... is arguing that NOTHING has impeded the P5 to this point.

Simply not true. And, he protests too much about Anti-trust legislation. Fact is ... we have ONE really Big impediment that can play out outside the court system. It has been impacted already by Utah senators. And, you can expect that where this is going is NOT simple. It is the argument Blumenthal made (with others back in 2003). You simply cannot exclude a class of smaller states ... and leave no capacity to "join the club" as your University grows (look at UCF and USF going beyond 50,000) ... and leave no ability to rise to compete. I think the Bully Pulpit is there for an argument for an Open system. And the P5 don't want it. Old Dominion can pass Wake in a heartbeat with one ... Bobby Petrino or a Peterson.

What are the P5 doing as well? Trying to NOT be inclusive in the Playoff. We know the Playoff will be 8. A few good Boise teams ... or more ACC defeats proves that the P5 is a paper Tiger. That, in this sport, you can lock out 65 programs ... and guarantee their losses will not sit well with lots of state legislators ... and then on a National level. It ain't about anti-trust and courts.

I would say they are Trying to NOT be inclusive, while appearing inclusive.

There's an underlying factor here as well. If a (public) school is forced down against their will, it will most assuredly have a negative effect on enrollment. Once that occurs and schools lose out on funding they would have otherwise received, that's when you'll really see legislators act. Heaven help you if you get on the wrong side of Congress. If they can force change in Major League Baseball (that has and anti-trust exemption), there's no telling what they would do to some of these large and fragile egos in the P5 + Notre Dame.

Athletics should always provide for the benefit of academics. These ADs and some presidents think it is the other way around.
 
that's not really true. I think there is a huge difference in the optics of the situation if you move too far away from being a college team. it isn't the same as it is now. it isn't the same as what SMU did in 1980. That was cheating, not everyone knew about it and the team was successful. the nature of the beast changes dramatically when you come right out and pay players who may or may not bother going to class. Because, let's face it, that is a big part of this, too.



So if UCONN started playing players and was still successful, you wouldn't watch it or care? COME ON!

NOTHING will change if they start playing players. People will still show up to watch games, people will still donate money to the booster clubs, and people will still care alot if their team wins or loses.
 
Would they allow ND into their precious club if they weren't in a conference? I think I already know the answer but if some folks already don't like that they get special privilege, this might be their way of forcing them into a conference. Not sure....

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Notre Dame would go where the ACC goes. John Swofford announced yesterday that part of Notre Dame's contract with the ACC in playing the 5 games per year is that if Notre Dame ever chooses to join a football conference before 2026-2027, it will be the ACC.
 
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