Current:Home > MarketsAlgosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center-SEC, Big Ten moving closer to taking their college football ball home and making billions -FundTrack
Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center-SEC, Big Ten moving closer to taking their college football ball home and making billions
Indexbit View
Date:2025-04-10 03:08:28
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey was speaking on Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank Centerthe Triple Option podcast earlier this week, and the future of college football was laid out for all to see.
If it wasn’t clear already, it will be now after the most powerful man in college sports pulled back the curtain.
The SEC and Big Ten are in the process of taking their ball home — and making billions with it.
“They want to be us, and that’s on them to figure it out,” Sankey said. “Not on me to bring myself back to Earth.”
How about that for the NCAA’s long-held mantra of collegial cooperation of like minds?
Understand this: Sankey says nothing without intent. He’s measured and detailed, and there’s purpose to everything.
So it should come as no surprise that this latest revelation comes a week before SEC and Big Ten officials meet again to discuss the future of their place in the sport. Together.
They'll deal next week with the fallout of the House case awarding billions to former players, moving forward with millions in revenue sharing (see: pay for play) possibly as soon as the 2025 season, and finding new streams of revenue through non-conference scheduling to help pay for it.
Sankey's comments also came shortly after something called the College Student Football League was officially unveiled as an option to “grow FBS college football and adapt to a legal and political landscape.”
WEEKEND FORECAST: Expert picks for every Top 25 game in Week 6
AWARD TIME: The highs and lows of college football's first month
A 136-team “league” that has 72 teams in its top division (essentially, the current 68 Power conference teams and Notre Dame), and the remaining 64 in another — with the concept of regulation and promotion movement between divisions.
This, of course, has about as much of a chance to succeed as the XFL.
Because the idea of such a league is based on the SEC and Big Ten coming back to the pack, their 34 universities choosing to share the wealth with all involved out of the goodness of their hearts.
So when Sankey was asked on the Triple Option podcast about being the “commissioner of college football” — this nebulous idea of a management of one directing the most dysfunctional and unwieldily association in the history of associations — he balked.
Then threw high and tight on the College Student XFL.
“I’ve studied it a little bit, and I come back to I don’t want to dumb down the Southeastern Conference to be part of some super league notion with 70 teams that some people speculate would happen,” Sankey said.
Hello, reality.
Look, in a Pollyanna world, college football finds a way for all to be fat and happy, strolling hand in hand down the yellow brick road. That’s not how this is going to play out.
Television consumers of football want big games and big moments and big stories. Advertisers who pay the bills want the same.
They want Georgia vs. Alabama and Ohio State vs. Oregon and Michigan vs. Texas. They don’t want Alabama vs. Western Kentucky or Ohio State vs. Marshall.
We’re five weeks into the season, and of the top 12 games in television ratings, the SEC has a team playing in 10. Four of the top 12 are SEC vs. SEC games.
All of the top 12 games have at least one SEC or Big Ten team involved. The final breakdown of conferences in the top 12: 10 SEC, three Big Ten, two ACC, one Big 12 and one Notre Dame.
And you want Sankey to go to his 16 university presidents, currently hemorrhaging cash from the House case, future revenue sharing and the facilities boom, and offer up the fiscally reckless idea of everyone eats in the College Student whatever it's called?
The SEC and Big Ten aren’t necessarily breaking away from the rest of college football as much as they are moving forward. Because a clean break comes with legal hurdles and public scorn.
So Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti have painted this canvas as a “working group” to deal with “challenges” facing college sports. It’s brilliant in its simplicity.
Moving forward and creating natural separation from the rest of the pack by creating a favorable College Football Playoff format, and a scheduling monopoly with non-conference games that increase media rights revenue — and essentially boxes out the remainder of the field.
And who among us will argue with more Michigan vs. LSU, and Ohio State vs. Alabama, and Georgia vs. Penn State in the regular season? To say nothing of similar games in the CFP.
This thing has surged like a rocket since the SEC announced expansion to 16 teams and the Big Ten moved to 18.
It’s not coming back to Earth any time soon.
veryGood! (8437)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- University of Minnesota issues safety alert after man kidnapped, robbed at gunpoint
- Michigan man in disbelief after winning over $400,000 from state's second chance lottery giveaway
- Climate change affects your life in 3 big ways, a new report warns
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Horoscopes Today, November 13, 2023
- South Korea and members of the US-led UN command warn North Korea over its nuclear threat
- Democrats adjourning Michigan Legislature to ensure new presidential primary date
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- 3 hunters dead in Kentucky and Iowa after separate shootings deemed accidental
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- See Ariana Grande and Ethan Slater Step Out for Broadway Date Night
- Why Kourtney Kardashian Wishes She Could Go Back to Her No-Feelings-B--chy Self
- Jana Kramer Gives Birth to Baby No. 3, First With Fiancé Allan Russell
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- CBS shows are back after actors' strike ends. Here are the 2024 premiere dates
- The SAG-AFTRA strike is over. Here are 6 things actors got in the new contract.
- 'Garfield Movie' gets first trailer: Watch Chris Pratt, Samuel L. Jackson as cartoon cats
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Mother of Florida dentist convicted in murder-for-hire killing is arrested at Miami airport
Zelle customers to get refunds for money lost in impostor scams, report says
Cantaloupes sold in at least 10 states recalled over possible salmonella contamination
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Jana Kramer Gives Birth to Baby No. 3, First With Fiancé Allan Russell
3 murderers freed in Australia after court ruled out holding migrants indefinitely, minister says
A former Fox News reporter who is refusing to divulge her sources could be held in contempt of court