THERE ARE CONCERNS THAT SEEMINGLY HAVE NOT BEEN BROUGHT UP IN THE THREAD CALLED "BOUND AND DETERMINED" IN "FBS FOOTBALL" nor in any Furman Basketball thread. There will be ripple effects on Furman Football. There may also be equally large or larger ripple effects on Furman basketball. "Conference Realignment Today" is driven by football, but it is relevant to Furman basketball.
Article by Matt Bonesteel, Washington Post, "Southern Cal, UCLA's move shakes up more than just Big Ten." Published in The State Tuesday July 5, 2022.
"What will college sports look like in 2026? We're pegging this question to 2026 of (sic) two reasons: College football is driving all of this, and the CFP's television contract with ESPN expires after the 2025 season. After that, the college sports landscape as we know it could receive a wholesale makeover. What if the Big Ten and SEC continue their likely raid of other conferences to the point where their size and strength are such that they decide to leave the NCAA entirely, entering into talks with the television networks about creating theri own personal fiefdom? Any school not desired by one of those two conference would be left with scraps. What if the Big Ten and SEC decide to break away from the NCAA but bring along all 64 teams in the Power Five conferences ... plus Notre Dame? ... And let's not forget about college basketball, which doesn't bring in nearly the money that ... football does but still generates a lot of revenue, thanks in great part to the NCAA's television contracts for ... basketball ... tournaments. The NCAA's deal with CBS and Turner Sports for the men's tournament runs through 2032, and its blue-bloods-and Cinderallas format makes for compelling television every March. But what if all those blue bloods - basking in the prospect of further college football-generated riches - decide to leave the NCAA and create their own tournament?"
Article by Matt Bonesteel, Washington Post, "Southern Cal, UCLA's move shakes up more than just Big Ten." Published in The State Tuesday July 5, 2022.
"What will college sports look like in 2026? We're pegging this question to 2026 of (sic) two reasons: College football is driving all of this, and the CFP's television contract with ESPN expires after the 2025 season. After that, the college sports landscape as we know it could receive a wholesale makeover. What if the Big Ten and SEC continue their likely raid of other conferences to the point where their size and strength are such that they decide to leave the NCAA entirely, entering into talks with the television networks about creating theri own personal fiefdom? Any school not desired by one of those two conference would be left with scraps. What if the Big Ten and SEC decide to break away from the NCAA but bring along all 64 teams in the Power Five conferences ... plus Notre Dame? ... And let's not forget about college basketball, which doesn't bring in nearly the money that ... football does but still generates a lot of revenue, thanks in great part to the NCAA's television contracts for ... basketball ... tournaments. The NCAA's deal with CBS and Turner Sports for the men's tournament runs through 2032, and its blue-bloods-and Cinderallas format makes for compelling television every March. But what if all those blue bloods - basking in the prospect of further college football-generated riches - decide to leave the NCAA and create their own tournament?"