SEC hopes to stay at 16 teams
The realignment carousel could be coming to an end soon as sources tell
Saturday Down South's Matt Hayes that the "preference" from SEC presidents is for the conference stay at 16 teams instead of entertaining expansion moves. Hayes reports that presidents would lean towards staying at 16 teams even if Notre Dame were to join the Big Ten. "The need just isn't there," an SEC athletic director told Hayes. If the SEC plans to stand pat, it could close the door on programs like Oregon, Clemson and Florida State getting into the high-money conferences -- and could be a lifeline for conferences like the Pac-12 and ACC to prevent major attrition.
All this talk about teams leaving for other conferences leaves out one important point, the school that leaves has to have somewhere to go. It's pretty clear right now that neither the SEC Presidents nor the B10 Presidents see any schools worthy of joining their conferences right now. That may change down the road, but I think for now things are quiet except for possible moves between the PAC and B12.
I think alot of fans are overvaluing how much their schools program is worth.
The next CFP is really where things will hit. If there is an expanded playoff with all the P5 conferences getting automatic bids then there really is no need for the Big 2 to expand at all and frankly it would run against their interests to expand. If the Big 2 decided to break off and do their own thing then there would be a great desire by quite a few teams in the P3 to move up, but realistically only a handful of them would ultimately be taken as the more teams you have in your conference the more money you have to make to feed all those mouths.
Here is how I look at ACC Schools.
I think 6 schools basically have no shot at moving. Of the others.
Clemson - I think SEC would take Clemson due to their brand. Even with SC, TN and UGA right there.
UNC - I actually think UNC is the most overall attractive team in the league and the only one that both the SEC and B10 would have serious interest in. UNC Would never consider joining the SEC, they would think about the B10 as they did a decade ago but i'm on record saying I think UNC will stay in the ACC that it built no matter what. If it wanted to leave I think it would actually be the easiest one to get an offer.
FSU - SEC would have some interest in them. I'd put the odds of them getting an offer from the SEC at between 40-50%. It would climb over 50% if they could win 10 games consistently. If they continue to be mediocre their odds drop.
Miami - sort of the same boat as FSU and imo they are direct competitors. I think it is highly unlikely the SEC would take both, I don't see there being enough value in both of them to justify it.
UVA - The B10 would have some interest here, but I think they would be somewhat down the list and like UNC I simply don't see them ever leaving the ACC.
VT - SEC would probably have some interest as it would be a school in a new state, but especially right now they likely don't being enough value. Maybe a 25-30% chance they could get an offer.
GT - The B10 would have some interest due to the market and its academic research reputation. Maybe a 20-25% chance it could get an offer from the B10. No chance at an SEC offer, GT brings nothing to them.
NCSU - SEC might have some interest, especially if UNC went to the B10, but i'd put the odds of an SEC offer at 20-25%.
There is also alot of overlapping political interests at stake here. If UNC doesn't leave the ACC , NCSU isn't going to leave either. Neither would UVA. After what UVA was put through to bring VT in I can't see VT leaving unless UVA also left. I don't think Miami and FSU bring enough value to justify one conference bringing in both.
Keep in mind that the SEC, with the exception of the TX offer - which is a huge state both geographically and population wise, has always offered a school in a state they don't already have a presence. They may not looking to be as national as the B10 or as concerned with big markets, but they have avoided overlap when they have expanded.
You also have to keep in mind that ultimately any offers have to be approved by the Presidents of the Universities and they have their own set of desires and wants beyond just the football program.
I don't expect the ACC to be the same in 2036 as it is today. I also don't expect it to fall apart or lose most of its members.