In a significant reshuffling of college sports conferences, Georgia Tech will rejoin the SEC, while South Carolina and Florida will move to the ACC. Florida will be in the same division as Wake Forest but not Georgia, facing a longer schedule and fewer scholarships. This move is part of a broader plan, referred to as the 'Super League', aiming to reestablish regional divisions in college sports, countering the trend of destroying regional identity over the past year. Critics have pointed out potential drawbacks, such as the longer schedule and fewer scholarships.
Clemson, South Carolina football in same division? It would happen in ‘Super League’ plan https://t.co/Uzl4FrGj7O
You know, with just a few modifications, you could have: * A West group … call it Pac-12 * A Midwestern … Big Ten * A South group … SEC is a good name * A Plains league … Big 12? I like it * A coastal group … ACC, maybe? This is so unbelievably stupid, it hurts my head. https://t.co/2LUSU3vO7N
Somewhat odd that right after destroying regionality in college sports the last 12 months there is now movement to ... once again regionalize? There's plenty I'd move around here (Plains is pretty clunky, swap UF and GT, etc.) but otherwise I'll always be pro-regionalization. https://t.co/6jhqKmPvqR
Have a hard time seeing something like this absorb the SEC and Big Ten, for financial and traditional reasons, but don’t have difficulty seeing something like this happen on a smaller scale. But listen, with private money itching to get involved, I guess anything can happen. https://t.co/PY5RPIRAQE
Florida in the same division as Wake Forest, but not Georgia. A longer schedule, but fewer scholarships. The failed College Sports Tomorrow plan was full of braindead ideas. https://t.co/IMoH46WvJF
Georgia Tech gets back in the SEC and South Carolina gets back in the ACC. (And Florida joins the ACC.) https://t.co/rKPOokvmQE