A group of influential sports leaders and college presidents is proposing a new model for college football, named College Sports Tomorrow, aimed at replacing the NCAA and reshaping the landscape of college athletics. The proposal, which is currently struggling to gain traction among key leaders and faces challenges due to existing league and College Football Playoff (CFP) contracts that extend out quite a few years, suggests a league owned by the schools similar to Major League Soccer (MLS). The model would be sold as a single TV property, and features a promotion/relegation system for the bottom 10 schools. This initiative reflects the growing sentiment that college athletics is at a critical juncture, with stakeholders actively seeking innovative solutions for its future.
From @TheAthletic: A group of influential sports leaders and college presidents is pitching a plan to replace the NCAA and change college football. https://t.co/bBj5mjyqht
A few details from the proposal being circulated around college sports: The schools own the league, much like MLS. Sold as one TV property. Bottom 10 schools can be promoted/relegated. Read 👇 https://t.co/GCwJY3RrPm
A model for college football is being pitched called College Sports Tomorrow. Here’s how it might be set up. https://t.co/IVsZes7Ktj https://t.co/px2KoojNa4
Though this idea is struggling to gain traction w/ the leaders it would need + league/CFP contracts extend out quite a few years, it's good to see those involved explain it on the record: https://t.co/wssvMchxgR
It was only a matter of time before something like this was going to happen. College athletics is at a crossroads and people are trying to figure out what’s next. https://t.co/6hniyosTjs