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Scroll to the end to see which football coach has explained his career moves by citing both a 1990s country star and the fifth centuryâs notorious âScourge of God.â
Big-League Birthright: Nobody wants this
A few guys in suits stand to financially benefit from something, even though it would be unpopular among the millions of people itâd affect.
I could be referring to any number of events throughout time, but Iâm referring to one potential outcome of tomorrowâs New Orleans meetings between the Big Ten and SEC, the second time college footballâs imperial duo has huddled within the past few months.
Theyâll discuss a handful of major topics, as Ralph Russo, Seth Emerson and Scott Dochterman explain, with one question already drawing the bulk of the attention: whether theyâll recommend the sportâs perpetually evolving postseason give multiple automatic CFP bids each to the two leagues coincidentally in charge of the CFP.
(Now is when itâs important to remember, according to the current arrangement, that the Big Ten and SEC âcan push through format changes without consensus from the CFP board of managers,â as that trio of authors describes.)
For months now, one version of that idea has loomed as the most unsettling: four guaranteed spots each. They could at least bother trying to talk us into two first?
The NCAAâs basketball bracket has sprawled to 68 teams, yet promises just one spot for each conference. Meanwhile, FBS footballâs Power 2, fresh from sending the Big 12 and ACC scrambling for members across the continent and dumping the Pac-12âs carcass at the feet of TV networks, are interested in the possibilities of declaring themselves entitled to half or more of the tournament every year.
- This past season, that wouldâve meant 9-3 Alabama replacing 10-2 SMU â just so four, rather than three, SEC teams could fail to reach the semifinals.
- In a season like 2015, it mightâve privileged Northwestern, whoâd lost two games by a 78-10 total, over a North Carolina team whose two losses had been by one score each.
Itâs not even like this would usually change the number of CFP teams from those leagues. History suggests theyâd usually get four anyway, especially in a 16-team field. Instead, itâd hurt the sport by adding a formal failsafe on top of the Power 2âs massive list of advantages. Hereâs a dud of a story: David beats Goliath, and then Goliath uses his personal mulligan.
I keep hoping all of this is building to a tidy future in which the Big Ten and SEC have divvied up literally all of college football, then given each school a promotion-and-relegation path toward the biggest paydays. (They could even put all the West Coast teams in the Big Tenâs westernmost division, which they could call âthe Pac-12.â) Like those stories where Doctor Doom takes over, then runs things benevolently, but only because that makes Doctor Doom look more impressive.
I think thereâs a capitalist argument for that version of CFB, and I might lay it out at some point, but it feels far away, at absolute best.
For the time being, in a scathing column, Stewart Mandel says the arrogant four-AQs notion threatens college footballâs popularity in a way the much-bemoaned transfer portal never could. Now weâll wait to see how enticing short-term greed really is.
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Eric Hartline / Imagn Images and Sean Gardner / Getty Images
Quick Snaps
đ  Deion Sanders, Eddie George, Michael Vick, DeSean Jackson, Terrell Buckley. So far, whenever HBCUs hire former NFL stars, it tends to have an instant impact.
đ Elsewhere, Stewart grades all 27 FBS head-coaching hires, from Temple hiring FCS legend K.C. Keeler to UCF shrugging and resuming Scott Frost Day.
đ Oh right, the Pac-12 still needs one more football school. Like, urgently. Chris Vannini has five candidates, including three whoâd apparently require some persistence.
đ€ After nearly a decade of Big Ten leaders touting nine-game schedules as virtuous (aka profitable), could their SEC rivals-turned-buddies align? Seth Emerson doesnât rule it out.
đ° Speaking of Deion, keeping him at Colorado long-term could require a salary in the $8 million range, Christopher Kamrani explains.
đ°Â Penn Stateâs new $3.1 million defensive coordinator, Jim Knowles, seems to have always wanted to end up in Happy Valley, say people whoâve long known him.
đ Last weekâs most-clicked: Manny Navarroâs first wave of oddly specific 2025 predictions.
Who Ya Got?: Inspired by international hockey fights
Regionalism has always been a big thing in college football:
- In the 1890s, as soon as Walter Camp and company began publishing All-America teams, he was charged with East Coast bias for overlooking players from the West â which sounds familiar, except big-time football had conquered only so much territory, so âWestâ still meant âMidwest.â
- Within a decade, football had flooded the map, and California hosted an East-West postseason game. Michigan, the âEastâ rep (from a league still named the Western Conference), defeated Stanford in that inaugural Rose Bowl, filling hearts with Midwestern or Western or Eastern pride.
- Later, Alabamaâs win over Washington in the 1926 Rose Bowl began resounding in legend as having won respect for the overlooked South. At least everybody agreed on where the South was.
That last matchup, the South against the world, has lingered ever since, especially during the BCS and CFP eras, when the âSECâ chant morphed from an underdogâs boast to a bullyâs taunt to ironic mockery.
So, inspired by the NHLâs wildly successful 4 Nations Face-Off, an All-Star tournament between players from four prominent hockey countries, todayâs âUntil Saturdayâ podcast proposed a CFB game between players from Southern schools vs. players from everywhere else.
I stopped by, and we pondered some 2024 and 2023 lineups. Despite the Big Tenâs CFP victories, the South might have been favored in both of those All-Star games, especially if itâd gotten to pull from the states of North Carolina and Texas (which sounds drastic, considering Lone Star State recruiting strength, but actually balances the number of schools on each side).
Now itâs your turn. In an average CFB season, whose All-Stars would win: the South or the world? Vote here. Iâll let you decide which states you consider Southern, since as CFB history shows, directions are all relative.
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Streeter Lecka / Getty Images
Todayâs Rabbit Hole
- One of those two aforementioned UNC losses in that 2015 season was a 17-13 Thursday opener against Steve Spurrierâs South Carolina.
- However, Spurrierâs victorious Gamecocks would stumble to a 2-4 start, otherwise beating only George OâLearyâs UCF along the way.
- OâLeary would soon resign amid UCFâs 0-12 season, bookending his 11-year Orlando tenure with winless campaigns. (Heâd then be replaced by Scott Frost, Mark I.)
- But weeks before OâLearyâs exit, Spurrier himself had also skedaddled. Strolling into a de facto resignation presser, he said, âAlright, letâs get this over with.â
- That called to mind his explanation of his likewise abrupt 2002 exit as head coach of Washingtonâs NFL team: âI was like Jo Dee Messina and her song âMy Give a Damnâs Busted.â Toward the end there, my give a damn was busted.â
- In 2020, he explained his Carolina vanishing by citing a different thinker: âIn âLeadership Secrets of Attila the Hun,â it says, âWhen defeat is inevitable and thereâs no way you can win, itâs better to retreat and come back and fight another day.’â
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(Top photo: Kirby Lee / USA Today)