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Baredevil
We might see a movement away from divisional play and the conference championship format pioneered by the Southeast Conference more than 20 years ago. from a See Bee Ess article:
Several important pieces in there to de-construct:
First, it sounds like the ACC is trying to avoid having an imbalance between its divisions. 3 times in ten seasons since their expansion (2005, 2009, 2012), a team with a better record has finished second in their division and watched a team with a worse record from the other division play in the CCG. This seems like a bigger gripe in the SEC West, or would have been in the old Big Xii South. But if conferences can scrap the divisions, they can have better matchups with stronger teams in the CCG. That may be a negative when you have a 12-0 team losing to an 11-1 team that they already beat once in the regular season, but that can actually happen in the current format anyway. A positive, which is mentioned, is you get to preserve more traditional rivals and can have more flexible/frequent scheduling.
Second, Swofford refers to a "decentralization of things" from the NCAA, giving more power to the conferences. Specifically, the Power Five conferences. This sounds like the early rumblings of a complete breakaway from the parent company. He gives lip service to Kansas City, saying it's more about "principle" rather than autonomy, but the autonomy is definitely there.
Third, without the 12-team mandate, leagues can actually downsize and still do the money-grabbing CCG without the bulky 12-team, 2-division format. OR, they can make decisions based on how individual seasons play out, and choose to have the CCG or not. (That might not be plausible since the games are huge events that require a lot of advanced planning.) The Big Xii can stay where they are and not have to water down their product with 2 second-tier level teams, The AAC can stay at 11 schools and have a CCG, and the PAC can jettison Colorado and Utah and go back to their 10-team, 9-game schedule that they loved so much. Leagues may not want to shrink just now, but if that eventual breakaway from the NCAA happens, I think it's more likely that some teams get booted from their leagues.
ACC commissioner John Swofford said the NCAA board will consider in April legislation from the ACC and Big 12 to give conferences autonomy on how they stage conference championship games. The legislation would eliminate the requirement that in order to stage a conference championship game a league must have 12 teams, round-robin divisional play and pair two division champions for the championship.
There appears to be considerable support for allowing conferences, not the NCAA, to decide how to stage league championship games.
"I think it would be in keeping with the decentralization of a lot of things in the NCAA," Swofford said. "We're supportive of this mainly out of principle, not because we know what we would do if we had that autonomy."
The ACC has had mixed reviews internally about changing its championship game format. A positive is scrapping divisions would allow teams to play each other more frequently during the regular season.
"From a pure business standpoint, it could be helpful," Swofford said, referring to more attractive regular-season matchups for TV and attendance. "But you give up some things too. You give up divisional races, for one."
Several important pieces in there to de-construct:
First, it sounds like the ACC is trying to avoid having an imbalance between its divisions. 3 times in ten seasons since their expansion (2005, 2009, 2012), a team with a better record has finished second in their division and watched a team with a worse record from the other division play in the CCG. This seems like a bigger gripe in the SEC West, or would have been in the old Big Xii South. But if conferences can scrap the divisions, they can have better matchups with stronger teams in the CCG. That may be a negative when you have a 12-0 team losing to an 11-1 team that they already beat once in the regular season, but that can actually happen in the current format anyway. A positive, which is mentioned, is you get to preserve more traditional rivals and can have more flexible/frequent scheduling.
Second, Swofford refers to a "decentralization of things" from the NCAA, giving more power to the conferences. Specifically, the Power Five conferences. This sounds like the early rumblings of a complete breakaway from the parent company. He gives lip service to Kansas City, saying it's more about "principle" rather than autonomy, but the autonomy is definitely there.
Third, without the 12-team mandate, leagues can actually downsize and still do the money-grabbing CCG without the bulky 12-team, 2-division format. OR, they can make decisions based on how individual seasons play out, and choose to have the CCG or not. (That might not be plausible since the games are huge events that require a lot of advanced planning.) The Big Xii can stay where they are and not have to water down their product with 2 second-tier level teams, The AAC can stay at 11 schools and have a CCG, and the PAC can jettison Colorado and Utah and go back to their 10-team, 9-game schedule that they loved so much. Leagues may not want to shrink just now, but if that eventual breakaway from the NCAA happens, I think it's more likely that some teams get booted from their leagues.