If indeed the changes you all describe are inevitable, why would it make sense to let the BigSEC drive the change and leave the rest of us as bystanders. With NIL & student athlete free agency, College sports will never go back to what it was. Embrace the change, incorporate a new league with paid contract players that aren’t students, and create new content not connected with any current league.
Create a new entity with disaffected colleges, the NFL, cities that are interested in new sports franchises, and broadcast networks locked out of existing agreements. Players that aren’t interested or able to go to college, players that don’t make rosters with NFL teams, and college players that have exhausted their eligibility could make up the nucleus of players. Games could be played on off days for the NFL and college leagues or perhaps on a different schedule, preferably in college venues with available facilities.
If the need for additional content is what has driven the uncontrolled growth in money for broadcast rights, let’s help fill that void. Could be an eastern thing or national with cities or areas locked out of the BigSEC. Syracuse, Buffalo, Boston, Pittsburgh, Miami, DC, Atlanta, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Charlotte, and other cities left out of the CFB monopoly all around the country could be targets.
Let the cities, universities, NFL, and broadcast partners be co-owners of the franchises so they’d all have a stake in their success. Players that NFL teams can’t maintain on their rosters could make use of a developmental paid league. We’ve let the BigSEC drive the bus long enough. A new paradigm may not work but could at least be studied.