MEGA Conference Realignment and lawsuits Megathread: Stories, Tales, Lies, and Exaggerations

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The deal is done, the race is run. Announcements will come at another time.
At the risk of having my own questionable reading comprehension issues....just so I'm clear on this... when you write, "The Deal is done", does that mean, "It's so obvious what is going to happen, you just have to read the tea leaves" or do you mean, "Rad and UM leadership have been on the phone with the B10 leadership and they are finalizing actual details and terms"....?
 
He said pusillanimous 😂


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All the talk about schools joining B1G/SEC...

And I'm just wondering when the talk about some of the CURRENT B1G/SEC (honestly mostly B1G) schools getting distribution cuts in order to remain in the conferences start....

Honestly if you want to make the BEST model, it's waiting for B1G and SEC deals to end, then the top 40-44 programs breaking off from the NCAA and doing their own thing. And the rest of the College Sports can go back to the real regionality of conferences.

There is just no world where Rutgers should be B1G and not like Miami. ****... why not Duke over Rutgers if this current all-sports way is run... The reality is just the top 40-44 teams splitting off for CFB and then getting a NCAA reset back to how it was from like pre PAC12 collapse for the rest of athletics would be best imo.
 
This just in...

The phones in athletic departments across the country have reportedly been ringing nonstop, with insiders claiming a seismic shift in the college football landscape may be underway. At the center of what some are already calling “the most aggressive conference battle in modern sports history” sits an unlikely prize: the University of Miami and Notre Dame.

According to anonymous sources “close to the situation,” both the Big Ten and the SEC have entered into what appears to be a high-stakes bidding war, each attempting to lure the two historic programs into their already sprawling conferences. While neither conference has officially confirmed negotiations, whispers of private jets, late-night meetings, and “unprecedented financial packages” have fueled speculation that the power structure of college football could soon be rewritten.

The Big Ten, already stretching from coast to coast, is said to be pitching Miami and Notre Dame as the final pieces in a truly national footprint. Executives are rumored to be emphasizing academic prestige, media reach, and the potential for lucrative television deals that would “change the economics of college athletics forever.” One unnamed consultant reportedly described the pitch as “less of an invitation and more of a corporate merger.”

Meanwhile, the SEC is allegedly taking a different approach, leaning into its reputation as the most dominant football conference in the country. Sources claim that SEC officials have framed the move as a chance for Miami and Notre Dame to “prove themselves weekly against the best of the best,” with the added incentive of record-setting revenue distributions. Some insiders suggest that the SEC’s strategy includes promising marquee rivalry games that would “redefine Saturday television.”

Perhaps most intriguing is Notre Dame’s position. Long known for its independence, the school has historically resisted joining a conference in football. Yet reports indicate that administrators may be reconsidering, citing the rapidly changing financial landscape and the pressure to remain competitive in an era of mega-conferences. Miami, for its part, is said to be weighing the cultural fit of each conference against the promise of increased exposure and resources.

Critics of the potential expansion warn that such a move could further widen the gap between power programs and the rest of college football, effectively creating a “super league” that leaves smaller conferences behind. Supporters, however, argue that the evolution is inevitable, driven by media rights deals and the insatiable demand for high-profile matchups.

For now, both Miami and Notre Dame have remained publicly silent, issuing only brief statements about “evaluating all options” and “focusing on current commitments.” But if the rumors are to be believed, decisions could come sooner rather than later, setting off a domino effect that might reshape the sport for decades to come.

As one anonymous executive put it, “This isn’t just about two schools. It’s about who controls the future of college football.”





... from an AI prompt.
 
All the talk about schools joining B1G/SEC...

And I'm just wondering when the talk about some of the CURRENT B1G/SEC (honestly mostly B1G) schools getting distribution cuts in order to remain in the conferences start....

Honestly if you want to make the BEST model, it's waiting for B1G and SEC deals to end, then the top 40-44 programs breaking off from the NCAA and doing their own thing. And the rest of the College Sports can go back to the real regionality of conferences.

There is just no world where Rutgers should be B1G and not like Miami. ****... why not Duke over Rutgers if this current all-sports way is run... The reality is just the top 40-44 teams splitting off for CFB and then getting a NCAA reset back to how it was from like pre PAC12 collapse for the rest of athletics would be best imo.
Rutgers was brought in as prerequisite to get their rival Maryland, and by getting both of them at once, the B1G accomplished their goal of getting into the east coast tv markets. Maryland got more money it needed.

They had just brought in Nebraska a few years prior and expanding their footprint in the DMV and tri-state markets were the way to go to expand the revenue pie.

If schools were to go at it themselves, outside of their conferences, we’d see more ND scenarios rather than a unified front of revenue sharing like how the NFL does it. The numbers between programs — from a viewership standpoint — are too disparate.

We’ve already been through this with the Longhorn network; Texas and OU almost going to the PAC12—only for them to actually bolt for the SEC. The pac12 not acquiring Texas & OU is what caused it to implode.




To be national, is the point…They don’t want regionality. There is no reset inbound; ever. The realignment that happened at the beginning of the 20s was just a delay to what had been set in motion & brewing throughout the 10s. The schools that changed conferences just weren’t marquee enough for it to feel so monumental.

And if we want to really stretch the history out, & get to the origins, we have to go to the Supreme Court case involving UGA and OU in the 80s.
 
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Rutgers was brought in as prerequisite to get their rival Maryland, and by getting both of them at once, the B1G accomplished their goal of getting into the east coast tv markets. Maryland got more money it needed.

They had just brought in Nebraska a few years prior and expanding their footprint in the DMV and tri-state markets were the way to go to expand the revenue pie.

If schools were to go at it themselves, outside of their conferences, we’d see more ND scenarios rather than a unified front of revenue sharing like how the NFL does it. The numbers between programs — from a viewership standpoint — are too disparate.

We’ve already been through this with the Longhorn network; Texas and OU almost going to the PAC12—only for them to actually bolt for the SEC. The pac12 not acquiring Texas & OU is what caused it to implode.




To be national, is the point…They don’t want regionality. There is no reset inbound; ever.

Which is why I started by saying some current B1G schools get distribution cuts. The fact that they bring a more national footprint isn't worth the same distribution still. Talk about New Jersey market, but it's still the big dawgs that are truly driving those views.

Rutgers can remain in B1G, but on the renegotiation there should be a two tier payout structure. The teams getting 100% distributions, and teams getting like 70-80% distributions. Maryland, Rutgers, Northwestern, Purdue, Minnesota... **** if/when they expand to the Bay area or other ACC programs like Stanford, Cal, Duke, VTech, Pitt, Cal. Those are all non full-payout schools. I mean **** you can make it results based if you want to accomplish that...

Miami, Notre Dame, FSU, Clemson, GTech are the biggest 5 media draws pretty sure in the ACC. Let the SEC have UNC+UVA... FSU+Clemson are prob better SEC fits though. For B12 it'd be TTU, TCU, Iowa St, Colorado, then BYU/UTah. All like 10 of those schools are above Minnesota, Maryland, Rutgers, Northwestern though...

B1Gs top target should be Notre Dame and Miami at the top. Then Georgia Tech.
 
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