College Football Playoff Expanding To 12: It Will All Be Fine. Really.

College Football Playoff expanded to 12 teams. This is why it’s a good thing.

The College Football Playoff will expand to 12 teams in the near future. It’s going to be a positive thing for college football. Really.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

By around 2024 it’s going to be the 13th-best take in a 12-take world.

College football is giving us more meaningful football, and some don’t want it

Really, was that so hard?

The College Football Playoff Board of Managers have approved a 12-team expanded College Football Playoff that could start as early as 2024, but will most likely kick in around 2026 – contract issues, logistics, and a slew of other parts of the puzzle have to be put together to make this happen earlier than later.

When this is a go, the CFP will be made up of the six highest-ranked conference champions and six at-large teams. The first round will be played on the college campuses, and then it gets turned over to the bowl locations.

Yes, it’s for the money – as are all major sports – and yes, it’s about catering to the expanded monster conferences. The college presidents and athletic directors finally figured out there’s a nice, warm treasure bath waiting with lots of bubbles.

Of course, like everything, there will be those who shake their fists and get all weird because something fun might change and be more fun, but outside of “because,” they don’t have any real argument.

Expansion is a good thing. Really.

Start with this – there’s going to be a way for teams to play their way into the College Football Playoff.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, you win all your games in the Power Five and you’re in, but that’s not a given, and that’s not the right way to look at it.

There will be debates in the future about who that 12th team should be, but that’s fine. We won’t have to get into it about the fifth, sixth, and seventh best teams – at least the theoretical ones determined on a belief.

2020 Texas A&M had to play Alabama. Notre Dame didn’t, but it beat Clemson once before getting throttled in the ACC Championship rematch. Both the Aggies and Irish deserved to be in the CFP, but one had to be left out. That was a silly debate that should’ve been unnecessary.

Cincinnati and Oklahoma State and Utah all should’ve had a shot in some sort of a playoff system after the 2021 season. TCU should’ve been in the playoff after the 2014 campaign – and Baylor should have, too – but not everyone could squeeze into the four team format.

Was it fair that some teams – 2021 Georgia, 2017 Alabama, 2016 Ohio State – got to the College Football Playoff without being good enough to win their respective conference championships? Not really, but that won’t matter with an expanded CFP – they can get in, but that doesn’t mean teams that earned it will be left out. That leads to the best part about all of this.

The importance of the panel of judges is lessened.

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This is the part I truly don’t understand from the anti-expansion types. Why do you want any aspect of the championship determined by an opinion?

The College Football Playoff committee is fine, but these are important people with lives, and things to do, and families that love them. They know the sport, but they don’t know the entire landscape of college football from the rooter to the tooter.

Expand the playoff, win your conference championship with a good record in a great league, and you’re good. There – take it out of the hands of the judges. You control your own fate.

That’s going to make the season more fun.

Think about it. How much more awesome would the Baylor goal line stop against Oklahoma State have been in the Big 12 Championship if that was for a playoff spot?

How much more fun would the Pac-12 Championship have been if the Utah fan base got to have an even bigger party?

And what about the ACC Championship? It’s possible someone outside of friends and family would’ve watched Pitt vs Wake Forest last year.

More fan bases will be involved, more teams will have something big to shoot for, and there’s going to be more interest in college football overall.

Does that mean a Boise State or a No. 3 Big Ten team will take down Alabama in the playoff? Probably not, but that’s not the point.

Did UCF really think it could’ve or would’ve won the national title in 2017 or 2018? I don’t know, and neither did those Knight teams that just wanted a shot.

It sucks more for a team to not get a chance because the judges went in a different direction than it does to get trucked by the Tide. All everyone wants is the opportunity, and now it’s coming.

No, College Football Playoff expansion deniers, this won’t lessen the importance of the regular season. It’s going to be much, much harder than it seems to get into the CFP – this isn’t the NCAA Tournament or the NHL or NBA playoffs.

No, this won’t make for a worse playoff. You can’t get hot from three for a weekend and end up close to the Final Four.

Ask yourself this – where has there been any sort of a flukish loss in the CFP so far? Of course there will be some sort of a crazy upset somewhere when this expands, but if you can win two or more games in this tournament, you’re for real.

In the near future, every team will know in the offseason that the College Football Playoff is a real possibility, and not just a silly slogan put on a t-shirt.

Every fan base whose team is having a good season will be more engaged.

December will be more fun, the College Football Playoff will be more fun, and the sport will be more fun.

The College Football Playoff is expanding. It’s going to be okay.

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Colorado State vs #8 Michigan: Game Preview, Hot to Watch, Odds, Predicition

The CSU Rams head to Ann Arbor and the Big House to face the Michigan Wolverines. Can they pull off the upset a la App State in 2007?

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Colorado State vs #8 Michigan: Game Preview, Hot to Watch, Odds, Predicition


The Jay Norvell era starts as the Rams head to the Big House.


Contact/Follow @J0shFr3d & @MWCwire

Can the Rams start the season strong?

WEEK 1: Colorado State Rams vs. #8 Michigan Wolverines

WHEN: Saturday, September 3rd — 9:00 a.m. PST / 10:00 a.m. MST

WHERE: Michigan Stadium; Ann Arbor, MI (107,601)

WEATHER: Partly Cloudy, high of 87 degrees

TV: ABC

STREAMING: Fans can sign up to receive a free one-week trial of Fubo, which includes ABC, by following this link.

RADIO: K99-FM 99.1 / ESPN 1600 AM

SERIES RECORD: This will be the 2nd matchup between these two schools. Michigan leads 1-0 in the series.

LAST MEETING: #20 Michigan beat #10 Colorado State 24-14 in the 1994 Holiday Bowl

WEBSITES: CSURams.com, the official Colorado State athletics website | MGoBlue.com, the official Michigan athletics website

GAME NOTES (PDF): Colorado State | Michigan

ODDS: Michigan -30.5

OVER/UNDER: 61.5

SP+ PROJECTION: Michigan by 31.5

FEI PROJECTION: San Diego State by 27.5

PARKER FLEMING PROJECTION: Michigan 98.94% win probability (39.46 to 7.43)

The Rams kick off a new era under new head coach Jay Norvell. This time they are heading to The Big House to face the #8 ranked Michigan Wolverines. It is a buy game, CSU is getting $1.8 million, but it’s also a chance for the Rams and Ram fans to see where they are at.

Michigan is coming off of a 12-2 season, which included a College Football Playoff semi-final berth and their first win over Ohio State in ten years. The Wolverines are looking for a repeat season, but they’ll need to replace a number of key pieces on both sides of the ball.

Cade McNamara and J.J. McCarthy will be splitting quarterback duties with both of them getting a start the first two weeks. McNamara will be getting the start against the Rams, but McCarthy could see playing time as well.

Gone is 1300 yard rusher Hassan Haskins, in his place starts near 1000 yard rusher Blake Corum. With Donovan Edwards projected to split duties with Corum. The Wolverines have their top 5 receivers back (one is RB Edwards and the other is DB Mike Sainristil), so new threats are going to emerge.

The defense needs to replace the most talent after losing their top three tacklers and top two sack artists who accounted for 25 of their 34 sacks last season. Mazi Smith and Junior Colson figure to be the early leaders for the Wolverines.

why the Wolverines will win

The Wolverines are a top 10 team in the country. The Rams are 2-17 against top-10 opponents all time. CSU fans feel their is some App State magic in the air, but this Michigan team is too good to let that happen again. Last year’s leading quarterback, Cade McNamara, starts and has the chemistry with his receivers.

The running game will be a key factor early as well. The Rams had a top 60 defense last season, but struggled against the run. So expect the Wolverines to pound the ball early and test the Rams. The Wolverines bring back leading receiver Cornelius Johnson, but tight end Erick All might be the main factor against the Rams 4-2-5 defense.

The Wolverines defense is the biggest question mark as they need to replace Aidan Hutchinson and David Ojabo on the edges. Mazi Smith steps up in the middle of the defensive line after being named number one on Bruce Feldman’s list of college football freaks. Junior Colson and DJ Turner are two key pieces as well.

Mountain West Football: First Look At The Michigan Wolverines

why the Rams will win

Simply, the unknown. This is the first year under head coach Jay Norvell and defensive coordinator Freddie Banks. So CSU doesn’t have anything on film yet. The Wolverines will have to rely on old film and contacts for scouting. That level of newness is something that will work in the Rams favor.

The offense started to click as camp went on, but the Rams defense will be leading the day. Especially with how the coaches want the team to focus on forcing turnovers. The Wolverines were a top-25 team in giveaways per game last season and the Rams will look to take advantage. From the leadership at all three levels, CSU has the key pieces in place to bring a top defense in the country once again.

The offense looks to take that next step forward. The air raid is complexity by simplicity. The plays are simple, but the formations matter. And the talent to go along with it. Clay Millen, Tory Horton, Dante Wright, and A’Jon Vivens are all eager to get after it.

what will happen

The Rams might be able to hang around for a quarter or two, but eventually the talent level disparity will pop up and Michigan will start to pull away. The Wolverines offense starts to settle down after causing bumps early and the defense steps up to limit the damage. Wolverines will win, but the Rams gain a confidence boost.

Final Score: Michigan 45, Colorado State 24

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Utah State vs. UConn: Game Preview, How to Watch, Odds, Prediction

Utah State vs. UConn: Game Preview, How to Watch, Odds, Prediction Week 0 likely to feature a whole lot of Aggie offense against a UConn team without a D-Coordinator Contact/Follow @Logantj & @MWCwire Aggie Football Returns to Maverik Stadium (UConn …

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Utah State vs. UConn: Game Preview, How to Watch, Odds, Prediction


Week 0 likely to feature a whole lot of Aggie offense against a UConn team without a D-Coordinator


Contact/Follow @Logantj & @MWCwire

Aggie Football Returns to Maverik Stadium (UConn Will Also Be There)

WEEK 0: Utah State Aggies vs. UConn Huskies

WHERE: Maverik Stadium, Logan UT

TV: FS1 at 2pm (MT).

STREAMING: Fans can sign up to receive a free one-week trial of Fubo, which includes FS1, by following this link.

RADIO: kslsports.com/kslsportszone

SERIES RECORD: Utah State leads UConn 1-0

WEBSITES: utahstateaggies.com, uconnhuskies.com

GAME NOTES (PDF): USU Game Notes (PDF) | UConn Game Notes (PDF)

ODDS: Utah State -27.5

And just like that, we’re back. Last time we saw Blake Anderson’s Utah State Aggies, Deven Thompkins was dancing all over SoFi Stadium hauling in 60-yard bombs from third-string QB Cooper Legas and polishing a shiny new Mountain West crown.

We probably didn’t talk enough then about how many all-time performances USU fans witnessed that year. Most of the 2021 season was spent worrying about a potential Covid-19 reprise, or whether or not the team was more lucky than good. The definitive answer by last December—who the hell cares?—allowed a rare off-season of peace and prosperity among the Aggie faithful.

Expectations are high for this 2022 Aggie team loaded with strong offensive and defensive lines, an all-conference caliber QB and plenty of good vibes leftover from last year’s breakout campaign. Let’s see what they’re up against in this weekend’s CFB opener.

Normally, Key No. 1 for this matchup would go here. But…it’s UConn.

Look, no offense to the Huskies, but…come on. Last year’s squad went 0-6 in road games and 1-11 overall (although they did scare Wyoming in a narrow 24-22 loss, which is pretty funny). They return 12 starters and will presumably be led by Penn State transfer QB Ta’Quan Roberson, a 6’0 sophomore with 11 career completions to his credit. True, this year’s team isn’t last year’s team, but last year’s team finished the season with an average scoring margin of like -23 so let’s not overthink this.

Key No. 2: See Key No. 1

Starting QB and gilded Aggie hero Logan Bonner is back. Calvin Tyler Jr. is back. Justin McGriff’s towering 6’6 frame is back. While it’s possible the offense won’t boast the same firepower that elevated the program to the 15th-best passing attack in the nation last year, they’ll still look like superstars Saturday afternoon.

Key No. 3: Only One of These Teams Has a Defensive Coordinator

Defense often gets short-shrift in these previews, but here we are trying to highlight anyone or anything UConn has going for it defensively and it turns out the only real story of the past week is Defensive Coordinator Lou Spanos taking an indefinite leave of absence from the team. Do the Huskies have anyone on staff with defensive coordinator experience? Or will they let a lucky fan call their plays? With Bonner dropping bombs overhead will it really matter?

Prediction

Even in a tune-up game like this one, Utah State should consider it a derogatory mark on its record if UConn manages to so much as sniff the end zone. Bonner will cook, the lines will be strong, and it should be an all-in-all celebratory opening to the season at Maverik.

Score: Utah State 45, UConn 3

 

 

 


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Air Force Football: 2022 Favorites?

Air Force Football: 2022 Favorites? Can the Falcons really run the table this season? Contact/Follow @PSeanU1 & @MWCwire Kickoff to the 2022 College Football season continues to appear less and less distant in the horizon. For the Air Force Falcons, …

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Air Force Football: 2022 Favorites?


Can the Falcons really run the table this season?


Contact/Follow @PSeanU1 & @MWCwire

Kickoff to the 2022 College Football season continues to appear less and less distant in the horizon. For the Air Force Falcons, there has been quite a bit activity after a lull in the action following spring camp, which concluded nearly five months ago.

If you haven’t been following, a number of Falcons have been named to various prestigious pre-season awards and All-Conference nominee watch lists. This coincided nicely with the recent completion of the Mountain West’s Media Days. Prior to either of those announcements was the release of the Air Force football schedule for the 2022 season.

Pulse check time. We are getting close to football season. If you are a fan of the United States Air Force Academy, those ‘BpM’ should officially be elevated, because this could be a special season in Colorado Springs.

Don’t believe me? What about a credible college football insider like Brett McMurphy with Action Network HQ? The Falcons look so poised to dominate, McMurphy guarantees that Air Force will win every game on the schedule.

Ok, enough with the hyperbole, maybe there was no promise of an undefeated season decreed, but the Falcons were in some pretty good company for an interesting take. In the coming season, Air Force will be one of six teams to be favored in every game this year. Even for the USAFA optimist, this a pretty lofty task, running the table on the given schedule.

I would submit to you, there is not a game on the schedule the Falcon’s could not win (See the Utah State Aggies matchup vs. Alabama), but that doesn’t indicate they should. The college football season is a grind for every team, but that is especially true for the Military Academies who have a lot more to deal with than the rest of the college landscape. If your not familiar with some of the limitations that only Cadets face, well beyond the obvious of combat training, do yourself a favor and explore the topic. It’s as interesting as it is humbling. Or humbling at least to give this lowly Penn State alumnus a healthy appreciation.

What Stands Out?

There are definitely more formidable matchups on this years schedule, than games of lesser resistance. While being favored against teams like Boise State, Colorado (Boulder) and Utah State may all seem a little surprising; The Falcons have had some level of success recently against them. With a very experienced team, coming off of a double digit win campaign, it’s not irrational to compel Air Force as favored.

There are a few games that seem a bit more of a stretch to favor the Falcons if you really dig into the details. There is no team with a bigger gripe for being an underdog on this schedule than San Diego State. The Aztecs are currently riding a nine game win streak against against Air Force, dating back to 2010, with their most recent victory coming last year.

 

To put their recent dominance into context; Prior to this recent win streak spanning a decade, San Diego State had won just nine of their first 28 against the Falcons. This has been a true turning of the page in this Conference matchup. If the Falcons want to put an end to this losing streak, they are going have to do so under trying circumstances. They will face the Aztecs in their final regular season game of the year.

Air Force regularly is digging deep into their depth chart by seasons end. The grueling season has mercy on no-one, but that is especially true for the undersized, over exerted and absent rested Military Academy Teams.

Speaking of Military Teams, let’s talk about Army. Specifically, why being favored over West Point’s Football team is questionable. In 2022, like most years, Air Force will have a roster appearing more experienced, talented and deeper than Jeff Monken’s crew from New York. Somehow, that formula hasn’t yielded wins four of the last five seasons.

So while it’s not surprising that Air Force is favored in a neutral site game against Army, based on their respective 2022 team’s heading into the season. Having a more talented and complete roster, top to bottom (which Air Force currently has) does not secure anything against their bitter rivals.

Conclusion

The whole notion that Air Force is favored in most games, much less the entirety of their schedule is quite a dichotomy. The Falcons won’t play a team which by present day recruiting metrics, they are “better” than. Even so, to be favored in some games may still be reasonable. But for the entirety of a schedule, one with as many talented opponents as 2022 fashions? That is a testament to what Troy Calhoun, his staff and players have been able to accomplish.

Air Force may not go undefeated this year. But there isn’t a team on their schedule that the Falcons aren’t capable of hanging an L on. And I promise you, not one of those teams will be looking past the Falcons either.

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2022 Mountain West Football Top 50: Honorable Mentions

Here is the list of Mountain West football players that got some love from our staff but did not make our top 50 in 2022.

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2022 Mountain West Football Top 50 Players: Honorable Mentions


Here is the list of Mountain West football players that got some love from our staff but did not make our top 50 in 2022.


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Who couldn’t quite make the cut this summer?

Before our countdown of Mountain West football’s top 50 players of 2022 gets underway, we kick things off with a nod to those athletes who didn’t quite receive enough support to make the cut.

See anyone you think should have made our top 50? Did we overlook your favorite player entirely? Join the discussion using the hashtag #MWwireTop50 on Twitter, Instagram or leave us a comment on our Facebook page.

Stefan Cobbs, WR, Boise State

Someone always has to be the first one out and this year that’s Cobbs. In 2021, he played second fiddle to Khalil Shakir but flashed plenty of potential to suggest he could be the man this fall, catching 34 passes for 421 yards and five touchdowns. If he and Hank Bachmeier can find their way onto the same page early and often, watch out.

Melquan Stovall, WR, Colorado State

Cobbs wasn’t the only Mountain West pass catcher to fall just short of the cut. Stovall spent three years at Nevada as a key cog in Matt Mumme’s Air Raid offense and posted the best overall season of his career in 2021 with 56 catches for 643 yards and a touchdown. Now in Fort Collins with Mumme, head coach Jay Norvell and a host of other former members of the Wolf Pack, he could be in line for an even better campaign this fall.

Camby Goff, S, Air Force

This year, Goff has the unfortunate distinction of having appeared on the most ballots while falling just shy of the top 50. However, his first year in the Falcons starting lineup, where he saw most of his time at outside linebacker, was a big success with 42 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, two sacks and two forced fumbles. Now tasked with replacing Corvan Taylor in the secondary, he could very easily defy the skeptics in a new role.

Nehemiah Shelton, CB, San Jose State

Shelton just barely missed out on the top 50 once again, but it’s not because he didn’t have a very good 2021. He was one of just seven defenders in the Mountain West with at least ten pass breakups and brought in two interceptions along with 61 total tackles. The Spartans up front have received most of the attention in the past couple seasons, but don’t overlook this talented veteran in the secondary.

Braxton Burmeister, QB, San Diego State

The Aztecs’ presumptive starting quarterback had a handful of supporters on individual ballots, just as he did when he was recently named our staff’s pick as preseason newcomer of the year, but he got squeezed out in the overall numbers game. If he can stay healthy and best his numbers from 2021, when he threw for 1,960 yards and 14 touchdowns while running for 521 yards and two scores at Virginia Tech, shutting him out could look particularly foolish by December.

The Complete List

Air Force — Camby Goff, Kaleb Holcomb, Dane Kinamon, Trey Taylor, Jonathan Youngblood

Boise State — Jonah Dalmas, Ben Dooley, Kaonohi Kaniho, Scott Matlock, Ezekiel Noa, Riley Smith, George Tarlas

Colorado State — Tanner Arkin, Jack Howell, Mohamed Kamara, Angel King, Clay Millen, Melquan Stovall

Fresno State — Justin Houston, Josh Kelly, Tre Watson

Hawaii — Zion Bowens, Jojo Forest, Jordan Murray, Hugh Nelson II, Penei Pavihi, Jonah Panoke, Brayden Schager, Matthew Shipley, Maurice Ta’ala, Isaiah Tufaga

Nevada — Devonte Lee

New Mexico — Dion Hunter, Miles Kendrick, Aaron Rodriguez, Ronald Wilson, Luke Wysong

San Diego State — Braxton Burmeister, Jordan Byrd

San Jose State — Elijah Cooks, Nehemiah Shelton

UNLV — Harrison Bailey

Utah State — Brian Cobbs, Gurvan Hall Jr., Justin McGriff, Hale Motu’apuaka

Wyoming — John Hoyland, Andrew Peasley

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3 Conference Expansion Moves That Would Shock The World: Daily Cavalcade

College football expansion has been crazy enough – what other off-the-wall ideas are we not thinking about?

With everything happening in the conference expansion world, what moves would be totally shocking? Here are three ideas so crazy they might just work.


Daily Cavalcade of Whimsy

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

On the job, expansion begins here. We have proudly worked 26 days on this site without a lost school to another conference.

And don’t get me started about how Wheel of Fortune is TOTALLY rigged – it’s statistically impossible to have that many spins land on Bankrupt, and …

Does anyone want to discuss college football at college football media days?

Sort of, but the only topic brought up with all the leagues is expansion – okay, NIL, too – because that’s far more interesting than the normal “talk about how you’ve improved this season” question and “work hard” answer sessions.

Expansion, expansion, expansion – it’s all any radio hit I’ve done over the last few weeks has been about. I’ve been asked the same interesting question several times phrased a few different ways …

“At this point, what’s the college conference expansion move that would totally shock you?”

Texas and Oklahoma leaving for the SEC was a stunner, but it wasn’t as unthinkable as USC and UCLA leaving for the Big Ten. Not even the wackiest of expansion discussions saw that coming.

It’s boring, but if I’m being honest, the Sun Belt loading up with a few Conference USA programs – and getting Marshall, Old Dominion, and Southern Miss for this season – was about as shocking as anything else.

Before we get started, no, I don’t think any of the below will happen, and this is all based on nothing more than caffeine-fueled speculation, but that’s not the point.

If some dope like me is thinking of these things, the smart people with real jobs and lives and pants are certainly exploring every possibility.

If you had said two months ago that USC and UCLA would form the LA branch of the Big Ten …

So I’ll answer the question. Considering all the huge moves so far, and with nothing really off the table, what are three crazy expansion scenarios that would be really shocking?

Oregon and Washington to the SEC

If you’re Greg Sankey and the higher-ups in the SEC offices, and your total world domination balloon just got popped by the Big Ten, what do you do? What’s your next move?

Think national.

Of course landing Texas and Oklahoma was massive, but when it comes to everything that expansion can do for a conference, acquiring USC, UCLA, and the Los Angeles market was a far bigger statement.

The problem when it comes to college conference expansion is a geographic failure of imagination. Good luck finding anyone who can wrap their head around the time zone differences and length of travel from the Big Ten schools to LA, but that’s the deal now.

If you’re the SEC, you have to expand the brand and footprint outside of the southeast part of the United States – if a conference called the Big Ten can have 16 teams, a league called the Southeastern Conference can mean more in other areas.

Conventional wisdom when it comes to Oregon and Washington is that 1) they’re the next logical expansion move for the Big Ten or 2) they stay put as the new stars and anchors of a refurbished Pac-12. However, Phil Knight and Oregon have been pinging around seeing what’s possible, and Washington all but certainly would be involved as a sort of package deal – or the other way around.

Get the Seattle market, get all the marketing opportunities in an NIL world that Oregon has to offer, make the brand national, and expand, expand, expand.

And the SEC would beat the Big Ten to the punch.

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Notre Dame to the Pac-12

I need to get out more.

I’ve somehow talked myself into thinking this is the only move that makes sense for Notre Dame, even though there’s absolutely NO chatter about it anywhere from my Pac-12 types, or anyone else.

Seriously, what are you going to do if you’re that school?

Finally locking it in with the ACC in all ways would be the easiest move, but there’s a catch. If ESPN can work and change the ACC’s media deal, or if the Big Ten or SEC decide they’ll pay whatever it takes, some of the biggest brand schools are all but gone.

Officially making Notre Dame a full-time member might keep that from happening, but the ACC hasn’t had to try landing that plane because the deal in place still works.

But if Notre Dame really is snooping around …

The Big 12? No chance.

The SEC? Adding Texas sort of changes the dynamic, but if Notre Dame doesn’t want to join the Big Ten and be just another football program, the SEC makes even less sense.

The Big Ten? It’s SO sticky. The Big Ten is in the position of power here – it’s not going to give up any special concessions to Notre Dame, and the school doesn’t want to be thrown on the pile. This might be closer than we all think considering the USC and UCLA move, or Notre Dame can …

Remain independent with the current ACC arrangement. Yeah, a revamped TV deal would bring in a ton of cash, but that’s not where the cake is in the new college sports world. The opportunities with the big conferences might be too great. 
Or …

The Pac-12.

The Pac-12 is totally desperate to figure out something big to replace UCLA and USC, but it’s not in any position to go poach a giant school – and there isn’t a gettable one out there that can move the needle.

Notre Dame doesn’t have travel issues, it has ties to that part of the world with the USC rivalry and regular dates with Stanford, and best of all, it can pretty much ask for any deal it wants and get it.

And there’s the ego aspect. Join the Big Ten, and Ohio State and Michigan are still the stars. Join the SEC, and get buried under a mound of power-programs. Join the Pac-12, and that’s Notre Dame’s conference.

Notre Dame is tied into the NBC deal for another four years, but that can certainly be reworked. And then there’s the other issue – it contractually has to join the ACC if it tries to leave for another league before 2036, otherwise it has to pay the lost revenue.

Let’s just say that when it comes to Notre Dame – more than it is for the other ACC schools – this is doable, especially for a Pac-12 that might have to pay whatever it takes to get the one free agent that could change the game.

And then there’s the craziest idea that would throw everyone for a loop …

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Texas doesn’t go to the SEC

From the start of the Texas and Oklahoma deal with the SEC, all the Texas inside info types I know were … reserved.

Yeah, they were excited, and yeah it makes financial sense in a lot of ways, but Texas is already the richest athletic department going, and there seemed to be a realistic approach when it came to the football side.

There’s excitement over the recruiting opportunities, being a part of a bigger league, upping the profile in the southeast that much more, hype over the big matchups, but …

Life in the SEC is hard. That’s not to say – in general – that Texas isn’t happy, but it hasn’t been unabashed joy.

I usually have my finger on the pulse of the various fan bases when it comes to the big things, and I assumed Oklahoma people thought roughly the same way, but …

Nope. Very, very nope.

I’m not exactly sure what Oklahoma fans think is about to happen when their football-mad school joins a conference with Alabama, Georgia, Florida, LSU, and on and on and on, but the money is great, the profile is bigger, and any hint that this might not be the move they all think it is sets off a firestorm of anger.

And in the end, they might be dead-on right.

The Alabama run has to slow down at some point, and in the up-the-competition, up-the-game sort of way, it’s certainly possible that a historical powerhouse program like OU jumps in and becomes even stronger.

So with ALL of that said, I can’t get there – even in a wacky won’t-happen scenario piece like this – to think Oklahoma is anything but all in on the SEC.

Texas, though …

Don’t get me wrong; Texas is fired up about being in the SEC. However, Texas and Oklahoma are coming from two very different positions here.

The University of Texas still remains a far better fit in just about all ways with the Big Ten.

Do I think it would happen that the Big Ten finds a way to pivot UT away from the SEC to be a part of a bigger, stronger league with USC and UCLA?

It figured out how to get USC and UCLA. And I’ll throw in one other selling point for the Big Ten …

Remember, University of Texas … Texas A&M isn’t in the Big Ten.

But that’s a heavy lift. Too many moving parts, too much money, too many political aspects involved. However, try this scenario.

The Big 12 picks off at least two Pac-12 schools, maybe four. It lands Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado, and Utah – meaning they have the Phoenix, Denver, and Salt Lake City markets – to go along with the massive-school gets in BYU, Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF and they’re great markets.

All of a sudden, if you’re Texas, you have to ask what the media rights deal would be – and what the cut could be – to sneak out and jump back into the Big 12 to be the giant whale, as opposed to just another big fish.

Okay, enough insane tin-foil hat scenarios.

Do I really think Oregon and Washington will go to the SEC? No. I 65% believe they’re staying in the Pac-12, 33% believe they’re going to the Big Ten, 2% think there’s something else – like even the Big 12 – they might do.

Do I really think Notre Dame will go to the Pac-12? I’ve talked myself into thinking it’s possible, but it’s dead even between Big Ten life or staying as an ACC/Independent.

Do I really think Texas isn’t going to the SEC? Ehhhhhhhh, I actually don’t think this is that insane, but it’s going to join Oklahoma and be off to the SEC in 2024 …

Maybe.

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Mountain West Football: 2022 Media Days Central

The Mountain West football media is gathered once again on the Las Vegas Strip. We have you covered for everything that happens.

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Mountain West Football: 2022 Media Days Central


The Mountain West football media is gathered once again on the Las Vegas Strip. We have you covered for everything that happens.


Contact/Follow @MWCwire

Don’t miss anything from the conference’s annual preseason get-together.

After a successful return to the desert last summer, Mountain West football media days are once again underway in Las Vegas, this time at Mandalay Bay, and Mountain West Wire wants to make sure you don’t miss anything. Check back here throughout Wednesday and Thursday for all kinds of developments, big and small, as players and coaches discuss the upcoming season with conference media.

Team Developments

Air Force | Boise State | Colorado State | Fresno State | Hawaii | Nevada | New Mexico | San Diego State | San Jose State | UNLV | Utah State | Wyoming

The Big Stories

Media Guides

Air Force | Boise State | Colorado State | Fresno State | Hawaii | Nevada | New Mexico | San Diego State | San Jose State | UNLV | Utah State | Wyoming

XX

Big 12 and Pac-12 Realignment Merger Isn’t Happening. Now What? Daily Cavalcade

What’s next for the Big 12 and Pac-12 after they decided not merge and combine forces?

The Big 12 and Pac-12 won’t merge forces to combat all that’s happening in the realignment and expansion world. Now what for these two conferences?


Daily Cavalcade of Whimsy

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Sorry if this take sucks, it’s not my fault …

My best points were lifted by the Big Ten and now the Big 12 is open for business with my mid-level opinions.

2022 CFN College Football Preview of Every Team

May you all have a day full of the swagger the Big 12 is walking with right now

It was revealed on Monday night that the Pac-12 and Big 12 won’t be sharing their toys with one another.

The friendship probably would’ve been an overall plus for both, but goes against the current cutthroat expansion and realignment climate – they both think they can do more on their own, at least the Big 12 does.

The harsh reality is that the Pac-12 and Big 12 could combine forces, add other schools, resources, Megan Thee Stallion, and Season 5 of Stranger Things and still not come close to getting the attention paid to the Big Ten and SEC, but that’s not fair. These two can – and will – do just fine for themselves depending on what happens next.

Why couldn’t the Big 12 and Pac-12 form an alliance – a real one, and not the fake détente the Pac-12 had with the Big Ten and ACC?

Here’s the problem – or the positive, depending on which side you’re on – now that these two will likely try to poach the other’s territory: the Big 12 is in a position of power.

Which Big 12 schools make sense for the Pac-12?

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From an academic prestige standpoint – Tier 1 research status is the baseline, but the big conferences really want those with an AAU membership – along with potential markets and overall branding, Kansas makes a whole lot of sense, and that’s even a stretch. That’s about it, and there’s a reason.

Of course the Big 12 has solid academic institutions, far better football fan bases who actually watch and care about the sport, and decent enough markets to consider, but when it comes to branding and fit, do any of its members on their own change the Pac-12 dynamic? Not really.

Replacing USC with, say, TCU won’t move the needle enough to matter for the Pac-12.

And on the flip side, which Pac-12 schools make sense for the Big 12?

All of them, because the league already has its solid base in place without the Pac-12’s fear of being poached by the Big Ten.

Remember, this is about markets, and footprints, and expanding and improving the brand.

Are Oregon State and Washington State two superstar options in the expansion discussion? No, but both of them would open up new areas for the Big 12.

Does anyone in San Francisco care about Cal or Stanford football? Not really – I’m being nice about this – but the Bay Area is a massive market with a whole lot of alumni from other schools. The academic side of things matters with the presidents, alumni, and donor bases – Cal and Stanford work in a Rutgers-to-Big-Ten sort of way. No way those two go to the Big 12, but the Big Ten?

Remember, the Pac-12 has the University OF Oregon. The University OF Washington. The University OF Arizona. The University OF Utah. The University OF California. The University OF Colorado. There’s a prestige in having a state’s flagship school.

Not dogging the Big 12 schools in any way – the Big 12 has the University OF Kansas and the University OF West Virginia, but it doesn’t have the University of Utah, or the University of Iowa, or the University of Oklahoma, or the University of Texas.

That’s hardly the end of the world when it comes to the business side of expansion, but for a Pac-12 Conference that always had its own niche, it’s an ego hit to not have any “University OF” schools to bring aboard. It’s also a killer that it can’t go grab any monsters to replace what it lost – other than Notre Dame in a dream world, but that’s for a different day.

On the flip side, the Big 12 is far more likely to flip Colorado, Utah, Arizona State, and Arizona than the Pac-12 is at getting, say, Iowa State and Oklahoma State, who make a ton of sense but aren’t going to bail for the Pac-12 brand in the current situation.

Again, the Big 12 has the upper-hand here.

It’s got the improved TV contract likely coming. It landed huge schools with good markets in Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF, and it has an underappreciated gem in this whole process with BYU and its international fan base.

I still say the Big 12 should be all over USF, and beat the Pac-12 to the punch on San Diego State and UNLV, but it’s clearly thinking big. It wants Pac-12 schools and it might just be able to get them.

So now, the Pac-12 has to D up big-time.

It has to come up with something fast to put in front of its remaining member schools to show there’s still life without USC and UCLA.

There has to be proof of a better media deal and more positive things on the horizon. It doesn’t have to be massive, but it has to be something to make it look like there’s a future.

Copy what the Big 12 just did and go get big schools that make sense – and bite the bullet on the whole Tier 1 thing, for now. SDSU, UNLV, and Fresno State or Boise State don’t make up for losing USC and UCLA, but it evens the playing field a bit with the Big 12 after its recent moves.

Again, do something.

So what’s going to happen?

I could be very, very wrong here, and it could all blow up by the time you’re done reading this sentence, but my best guess is that everything chills out for a while.

The next move – if any – will probably be from the Big Ten, but it doesn’t mean everyone won’t be spending the next several weeks and months trying to put deals together.

Remember, the Big 12 was supposedly dead around this time last year – I’m old enough to remember when the American Athletic Conference was supposedly going to poach the Big 12, not the other way around – and no, the Pac-12 probably isn’t the new Southwest Conference, Big East, or WAC.

No, this merger didn’t work, but that’s okay – it’ll be more fun for the rest of us.

This Big 12 vs. Pac-12 business battle is about to get spicy.

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Air Force Football: Micah Davis Enters the Transfer Portal

Another Air Force Player Heads to the Transfer Portal The PAC-12 Wasn’t the Only Ones to Have a Rough Start to the Weekend Contact/Follow @PSeanU1 & @MWCwire As most of America headed into a holiday weekend ahead of various Independence Day …

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Another Air Force Player Heads to the Transfer Portal


The PAC-12 Wasn’t the Only Ones to Have a Rough Start to the Weekend


Contact/Follow @PSeanU1 & @MWCwire

As most of America headed into a holiday weekend ahead of various Independence Day festivities and celebrations; The United States Air Force football team of all collectives approach the holiday with a little less enthusiasm. Possibly the only people more disappointed than the Pac-12 to enter the weekend, were the Falcons offensive coordinator Mike Thiessen and company.

Unfortunately for the Air Force football contingent, Friday marked the day that their offensive weapon, Micah Davis officially entered the NCAA’s transfer portal. Now, Falcons entering the portal is nothing uncommon. In fact, during their semesters prior to becoming Juniors, turnover is quite high at the Academy, and in particular in that first year demographic.

Davis’ departure though may seem a little surprising to some, not just because of the success he saw on the field for the Falcons, but because of how close to fall camps we currently are. With all of that being moot at this point, the reality is, Air Force just lost one of the Mountain West’s biggest playmakers.

Micah Davis was another of the rare freshman to see the field, starting back in 2020. Davis looked like a star in the making as 2021 began to unfold, right up until he suffered an injury that cut his season short. Still, the do-it-all slot receiver averaged 10 yards a touch between catches and carries, collective six total touchdowns in the eight games he played.

In case your wondering, buried in those cumulative statistics was a 22 yards per catch average for Davis. When you consider the Falcons also featured Brandon Lewis, who tormented defenses particularly after Davis was out of the lineup, two things become apparent; Air Force had talent and depth from the slot.

The market for Micah Davis will be strong, and noone should be surprised. This is a guy that showed playmaking ability in a variety of ways, you just need to get him the ball. That means that Air Force will lean on a few more players to produce those yards on the edge, which Davis was so good at. As well as being a chunk-play producer in the passing game.

The person that you most reasonably expect to consume a lot of those expectations is Dane Kinamon. Not so different than Davis and Lewis, Kinamon actually started as a freshman, and has shown value as a runner, receiver and maybe more importantly as a blocker. He didn’t have the big- play numbers that Davis presented, averaging 6.5 yards per touch (14 yards per catch and 4.5 yards per carry), but Dane Kinamon actually found the endzone more, scoring seven touchdowns.

A few other names to consider when taking a committee type approach to replacing all that production would be Conner Carey, Ben Jefferson, Jet Harris and Zach Larrier to name a few.

Micah Davis was an electric player with the ball in his hands, and his playmaking abilities will be a great asset to a very fortunate offense, wherever he lands. But Air Force has shown an ability to live the next man up mentality, backing it up with results. Let’s see who may be the big play threat for the Falcons in 2022.

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