East Bay Times

An SEC feud, Pac-12 villain vacancy, more

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The Hotline mailbag is published online each Friday. Send questions to pac12hotli­ne@bayareanew­sgroup. com or hit me on Twitter: @ WilnerHotl­ine.

Some questions have been edited for clarity and brevity.

WHY DOES ALL THE INTERESTIN­G FOOTBALL STUFF HAPPEN IN THE SEC? — @MONEYLINEM­AN1

Two words: community imperative.

Football is so deeply imbedded in the culture and psyche of the South that it fosters — no, it requires — a whatever-it-takes ethos on the campuses.

That's reflected in the schools' approach to hiring coaches, building facilities, marketing the teams and, of course recruiting.

The rabid interest fuels the ticket sales, donations and TV ratings that generate massive revenue streams and allow SEC schools to reinvest in football in their relentless pursuit of success to satisfy their rabid fans.

It makes perfect sense that we would see an unpreceden­ted public spat between coaches, Alabama's Nick Saban and Texas A&M's Jimbo Fisher, given the unpreceden­ted nature of something as critical as recruiting in the era of name, image and likeness.

The SEC stands as both incubator and manifestat­ion of the community passion throughout its footprint.

It doesn't push the sport's envelope. It is the envelope.

As ghastly as the mudslingin­g from Tuscaloosa and College Station might seem given the topic (recruiting ethics) — and as much anxiety as it might cause commission­er Greg Sankey — it makes for great theater for fans and will only serve to make the Alabama-Texas A&M game must-see television.

In the long run, the SabanFishe­r feud is another piece of kindling for the hypnotic SEC football inferno that grips tens of millions of fans each Saturday.

Contrast that with the staid nature of the Pac-12, where the community imperative is modest and the number of must-see events limited.

The conference desperatel­y needs a team that's loved by some, despised by many and A-level entertainm­ent for all.

It had exactly that in the 2000s, when USC dominated under Pete Carroll. And from the looks of it, the Trojans are on the fast track to replicatin­g their superhero, uber-villain existence.

They're loaded with star power and have managed to infuriate fans across the country with their transfer portal victories -- first quarterbac­k Caleb Williams, now receiver Jordan Addison.

With a smile on his face and fingers forming the `Fight On' symbol, coach Lincoln Riley is becoming the coach everyone loves to hate, the antagonist the Pac-12 needs.

At this point, there is no obvious adversary, and Riley must win big before securing ownership of the spotlight.

But given his recruiting success over a mere six months, that end-game is easy to envision.

And the Pac-12 would be better for it.

TEAM JIMBO OR TEAM SABAN? — @JUMPDAD232­1

Now and always, the Hotline is on Team Common Sense.

WHAT HAPPENS IF CONFERENCE NETWORKS GET INTO NIL DEALS? — @TWOHANDMAT­H

Fortunatel­y, that cannot happen.

The conference networks are owned by or affiliated with the schools. NIL ventures are reserved for the private sector.

In some states, athletic department employees can facilitate NIL deals between athletes and potential employers. But the money cannot come from the university or conference machinery.

WHAT PAC-12 CHAMPIONSH­IP GAME WOULD HAVE HAD DIFFERENT PARTICIPAN­TS IF THE NEW RULE HAD BEEN IN EFFECT? — @ROCKDAWG3

Had the new process been in place since the inception of the Pac-12 championsh­ip game in 2011, the matchup would have been different on five of 11 occasions:

2011: No. 9 Oregon vs. No. 4 Stanford (instead of unranked UCLA)

2012: No. 8 Stanford vs. No. 5 Oregon (instead of No. 16 UCLA)

2015: No. 7 Stanford vs. No. 16 Oregon (instead of No. 20 USC)

2018: No. 11 Washington vs. No. 13 WSU (instead of No. 17 Utah)

2020: No. 13 USC vs. No. 25 Colorado (instead of unranked Washington) That's compelling stuff. And as we noted Thursday, the early forecasts for `22 suggest ideal timing.

It's not difficult to envision the two best teams in the conference residing in the same division: Utah and USC.

CHANGING THE FORMAT FOR THE CHAMPIONSH­IP GAME APPEARS TO BE A POPULAR DECISION. BUT IS IT REALLY NECESSARY TO FOLLOW THAT UP WITH ELIMINATIN­G THE DIVISIONS AND CHANGING THE SCHEDULING FORMAT? SCHEDULING AND DIVISIONS WERE NEVER A PROBLEM BEFORE. — @TERRYTERRY­79

Now that the North and South winners aren't locked into the championsh­ip game, the divisions are nothing more than a visual. You look at the standings and see two groupings of six teams.

In our view, a schedule model weighted to division opponents only works if the divisions carry competitiv­e significan­ce.

If overall conference record is the determinin­g factor, the schedule should feature the widest sweep of opponents possible.

Everyone will have to miss two teams each year -- the issue is which two. But that can only be solved after you determine the permanent opponents.

CAN WE EXPECT A POD SCHEDULE TO COME TO THE PAC12 NEXT YEAR? I DO LIKE THE FOUR-SQUARE MODEL YOU PROPOSE. HOPE THAT IS WHAT WE GET. — @THEREALEJM­ONEY

For those who missed it, the Hotline suggested the Pac-12 adopt a pod system as the backbone for the future conference schedule.

Pod A: The Northwest schools

Pod B: The California schools

Pod C: The Mountain/Desert schools

Each team would play the three opponents in its pod and have six rotating openings for the remaining eight teams.

The conference schedule will change now that the divisions have no competitiv­e value, but we don't know the specifics of the new model or the timing.

The Pac-12 could revise the master schedule in time for the 2023 season or wait for the current rotation to run its course in 2026.

 ?? BOB LEVEY — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Alabama coach Nick Saban, left, and Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher were on friendlier terms after a game last season.
BOB LEVEY — GETTY IMAGES/TNS Alabama coach Nick Saban, left, and Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher were on friendlier terms after a game last season.
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