BlazeOrange
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You'd never get buy-in from the established fiefdoms, but if you could (and since I'm bored today)...
Establish a relegation system BY CONFERENCE:
Establish a relegation system BY CONFERENCE:
- Start with four 11-team conferences at the top (B1G roughly covering the north, SEC covering the south, ACC covering the east coast, and a reconfigured B12/PAC covering the west coast). Keep the names or come up with new ones.
- Each conference has two associated lesser 11-team conferences, so you have B1GA, B1GB (start with lower level current B1G schools and fill out with upper level MAC), B1GC (lower level MAC and others in region), and similar pillars for the other regional conferences. End up with total of 132 teams, which is close to what we have in D1.
- Play 10 game in conference schedule, plus 2 non-conference games.
- A-level has an immediate conference championship game with winners earning top 4 seeds in playoffs. Fill out the rest of the bracket with only A-level teams however (I don't want to try to solve this one here).
- Bowl games configured to include conference championship games at the B and C levels with winners bumping up a level the following season. Other bowl games include relegation games of the bottom two A and B levels with losers dropping a level the following season. That's 16 bowls, each with serious stakes on the line.
- If other bowls want to invite teams and hold games as usual, they are free to. The non-playoff A-level and non-championship game B-level would have some solid teams that might support this.
- As an alternative, you could do immediate championship games and last place games, followed by bowl games pitting (for example) the B-level champion against the A-level loser, with the spot in the higher level division the following season being on the line.
- Revenue is shared within each conference pillar, although top levels get bigger cuts.
- Schedule uncertainty: Non-conference games are not affected and can still be scheduled years in advance. Conference schedules can largely be drawn up with only 1 or 2 games having TBD opponents, which would be resolved within the current timeline that schedules are released.
- Teams getting relegated downward would lose all of their players to transfers. As opposed to what is happening with the portal now?
- The existing conferences won't give up their money. Probably true, as you'd roughly double the size of current 16 team conferences to 33 team pillars. Could you double the income with weighted revenue sharing, plus the addition of multiple high stakes games that will draw in more viewers and $?
- How to deal with the major independents (you know who). Screw 'em. They can put a schedule together with whoever wants to play them non-conference and find themselves a nice bowl game opponent, but they won't be invited to the playoffs.
- Requires the various interests to play nice with each other and make some sacrifices for the greater good. Not what history has shown us is likely to happen.
