Could the Big Ten or SEC really break away from the NCAA?

Seton75

All-Conference
Jun 3, 2001
36,726
3,088
113
I never hoped I'd die before I got old, but i am glad these times are happening when I am old. I do like one quote:

"I would turn it around and say we should break away from them. Let them go, but they have to go in all their sports and see how fun it is to play baseball and softball and track when it’s just the 20 of you.”

In other words, F off!
 

jack 1970

Junior
Feb 12, 2022
295
228
43
Anything can happen. Its all about the $$$ and what's best for that school. Very limited perspectives. Kirby Smart is a great football coach but no rocket scientist.
 

Hall1996

Sophomore
Jun 5, 2001
174
137
43
I never hoped I'd die before I got old, but i am glad these times are happening when I am old. I do like one quote:

"I would turn it around and say we should break away from them. Let them go, but they have to go in all their sports and see how fun it is to play baseball and softball and track when it’s just the 20 of you.”

In other words, F off!
What I find interesting, if these conferences split away from NCAA, will teams left behind them be willing to play them (money still talks) and if they did, would they be allowed to?
 

SHUSource

All-Conference
Jun 3, 2001
41,981
4,236
48
The thing about either the Big Ten or the SEC breaking away is that either one, and particularly the Big Ten, will find out very quickly that they aren't nearly as appealing when they are not competing in a national context. They're going to get premium media rights rates when the importance of Rutgers or Northwestern or Purdue is suddenly magnified 50 times bigger than it was? The Big Ten won't be able to hide the slop that makes up two-thirds of its football conference. The SEC is deeper and would have more appeal, but only by degrees.

Part of the appeal of these leagues is that they -- well, really the SEC -- dominate in a national context, and the very top of the Big Ten does too in the past three years. But when they are eating themselves and only themselves week in and week out, it isn't nearly as compelling.

Given that there are no real rules or laws anymore, I don't see the antitrust threat as being what it once was, which is why I'm still quite sure you'll see the superleague formula come about eventually: A generous helping of SEC and Big Ten programs with broad brand appeal, filled out with selected other premium brands chosen from the ACC and Big XII -- your Florida States, Clemsons, North Carolinas, and such. There really are no slam dunks from the withered Big XII to be honest; maybe Texas Tech and/or Arizona or BYU? The ACC really does offer more brand value, but you're only talking about cherry-picking the best ones, anyway -- enough to get to 28 or 32 or so.
 

radecicco

All-Conference
Jun 24, 2013
945
1,502
93
Europe rejected the super league in soccer. Why, because so many fans would be disenfranchised. The same would happen in the US if the top 30 schools broke away. And you are right, it becomes less appealing playing the same teams over and over again. And suddenly 7-5, 5-7 records become the norm.