That's the question many are asking in light of the agreement between the ACC and FSU/Clemson. Most are talking about it terms of "if" and not so much "when".
It's not a new concept, as the Pac 12 had a similar model until other schools deemed it unfair and managed to stop it. That pissed SoCal off and they threatened to leave the conference. It took a while for that promise to come to fruition, but it did and now the Pac-12 is no more. The Utah AD admits that not conceding a greater piece of the revenue pie to SoCal was a fatal mistake.
We live in a copycat world. In this era of college football when it every single aspect of the game is looked at through the financial lens, you don't think Alabama and Texas aren't at least taking a glance at this unequal revenue distribution thing? The game is 100% about money now, in every single way. There is not one decision that is not financially based i some way. Every conference and every school is leaving no stone unturned to find ways to increase revenue. I just can't fathom those at the top of the heap from the exposure/revenue perspective in the SEC aren't at least having fleeting thoughts about this.
It's only a matter of time. Might not happen until the next decade, but it is coming. And it's probably fair.
It's not a new concept, as the Pac 12 had a similar model until other schools deemed it unfair and managed to stop it. That pissed SoCal off and they threatened to leave the conference. It took a while for that promise to come to fruition, but it did and now the Pac-12 is no more. The Utah AD admits that not conceding a greater piece of the revenue pie to SoCal was a fatal mistake.
We live in a copycat world. In this era of college football when it every single aspect of the game is looked at through the financial lens, you don't think Alabama and Texas aren't at least taking a glance at this unequal revenue distribution thing? The game is 100% about money now, in every single way. There is not one decision that is not financially based i some way. Every conference and every school is leaving no stone unturned to find ways to increase revenue. I just can't fathom those at the top of the heap from the exposure/revenue perspective in the SEC aren't at least having fleeting thoughts about this.
It's only a matter of time. Might not happen until the next decade, but it is coming. And it's probably fair.