RonJohn
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 4,995
I don't know what will happen. If I were to make a prediction, it would be more of a super league instead of existing conference realignment.Is your prediction that FSU and Clemson end up in a conference outside of the P4?
The biggest thing is that all of the conferences are set in their contracts until 2030 (Big10), 2031 (Big12), 2034 (SEC), and 2036 (ACC). Getting a full share for FSU and/or Clemson before then will be difficult for the conferences to negotiate with the media companies. If I understand correctly, the Big12 used all of their guaranteed expansion teams when they added the Pac12 teams. The Big10 and SEC just renegotiated their contracts. It has been reported that ESPN has refused to offer the SEC more money for things like extra SEC conference games. I seriously doubt that ESPN will offer them a full share for new teams. The Big10 has added teams at reduced rates because they couldn't get a full share. Oregon is arguably a larger brand than FSU and they couldn't get a full share. If FSU's goal is to get more money, there isn't currently a place with money available to provide for them.
I don't think anyone knows what will happen with laws/lawsuits/regulations. The P4 are planning to provide NIL money to athletes directly instead of through outside organizations. The teams dictate schedule to the athletes. They dictate where the athletes must workout, where they practice, and where they play. Even before direct payments, the NLRB has ruled that college athletes are employees. Once the teams are providing direct payments, I don't know how the schools can legally argue that they are not employees. There will be lawsuits from players to be declared employees. There will be lawsuits from players to be allowed to unionize. Congress might get involved to "fix" things, but there are almost always unintended consequences of legislation and things might get even worse if they try. IF we get to a point where players are unionized, I think it would make more business sense for all of the major conferences to combine into a single entity that negotiates with the union, and tries to maximize revenue as a whole. If the media companies see opportunity for more revenue with new contracts instead of continuing the old contracts, they might negotiate new deals with a new college football entity. (This isn't what I want for college athletics, but I see it as a real possibility.)
The media contracts don't expire until 2030 at the earliest. I am not predicting that players will officially be employees and unionize by 2025, but I wouldn't be surprised if it happened by then. That is why I think a super league is more likely than some conference shuffling in the near future.