The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
ACC drops two-division format in 2023-2026
New model has teams playing all conference opponents more often.
Seeking a way for its players to compete against every conference opponent, home and away, in a four-year career, the ACC has done away with its two-division format in favor of a one-division model with each team having three annual opponents. For better or worse, Georgia Tech will not escape its annual meetings with powerhouse Clemson.
The new format, adopted Tuesday by a vote of the league’s athletic directors and faculty athletics representatives, will be used from 2023-26, making this coming season the last for the Atlantic and Coastal divisions. In the new model, aside from the three fixed opponents — Tech’s will be Clemson, Louisville and Wake Forest — teams will play the other 10 teams home and away (once each) over the four years.
The new model addresses one of the major complaints about the two-division format after the conference expanded to 14 teams: that teams played interdivisional opponents (besides the permanent crossover partner) twice over a 12-year span. It also takes care of another bug with the model: that the conference championship game has not always matched the teams with the two best records. In the new model, the two teams with the best conference records will play for the conference title.
As for Tech’s primary opponents, Clemson, Louisville and Wake Forest make for an interesting trio. Tech-clemson has been one of the ACC’S prominent rivalries, a series that dates to 1898 and includes the legendary John Heisman, who coached at Clemson before Tech hired him away following the 1903 season. Tech has played only three opponents more times than its 87 games against Clemson — Georgia, Auburn and Duke.
However, the Tigers’ rise under coach Dabo Swinney has made the series a lopsided affair. Clemson has won the pastsevengames by an average of 27.1 points. While
Clemson is a rival, and Tech’s closest ACC opponent geographically, it’s doubtful Tech officials were insistent on keeping the Tigers as a primary partner. At the ACC spring meetings, AD Todd Stansbury said one factor the league should take into consideration was league members that have rivals outside the conference, as Tech does with Georgia.
By car, Wake Forest is Tech’s third-closest ACC opponent, following Flor- ida State. The Demon Deacons have one in-state partner, Duke, and can renew a series with Tech that had been infrequently played since the ACC’S expansion in 2013. Tech last played the Demon Deacons in 2017 and has not played in Winston-sa- lem, North Carolina, since 2010. The Jackets will go to Wake’s Truist Field in 2023.
In an interview with The Atlanta Journal-constitution at the league’s spring meet- ings, ACC senior associate commissioner for football Michael Strickland might have offered a hint of Tech’s circumstances when he said, “You’ve got N.C. State, Wake Forest fans that are there in the driving region (to Atlanta). Four, five hours (and) they’ve got tons of alumni that live down there.”
The Demon Deacons, it should be noted, figure to present a formidable annual challenge. Wake Forest won the Atlantic last season and is 23-13 over the past three seasons.
Louisville does not have a clear rivalry or geographic connection with Tech. The teams might have been linked in part because the Cardinals were lacking obvious partners. Louisville’s two other primary opponents are Miami and Virginia.
Tech had at least three other logical options that went unfilled. Florida State has had a series of memorable games with the Jackets. However, FSU AD Michael Alford said at the spring meetings that he most valued rivalries with Miami and Clemson and, in reference to Tech and Atlanta, said that he wanted to “expand our brand to different markets, and I also think that’s better for the league.” Florida State’s partners are Clemson, Miami and Syracuse.
Tech and Duke have played every year since 1933, a streak that became the longest active run for Tech when the Jackets and UGA did not play in 2020. However, it does not seem to be valued as a rivalry in large numbers on either side. Duke’s three partners are its in-state rivals: North Carolina, N.C. State and Wake Forest.
Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech have been Coastal rivals and had a history of division-deciding games during the tenures of coaches Frank Beamer and Paul Johnson, respectively. The Hokies’ three-team set is Pitt, Virginia and Wake Forest. Virginia was a must for Virginia Tech, and Pitt is a rival from their previous Big East mem- bership. Virginia Tech is the closest ACC school to Wake Forest (about a two-hour drive) outside of its North Carolina neighbors.
Tech will begin the new model in 2023 with home games against Boston Col
lege, Louisville, North Carolina and Syracuse and away games against Clemson, Miami, Virginia and Wake Forest. The schedule doesn’t
flip cleanly year over year with the non-annual oppo- nents. In 2024, besides their three primary opponents, the Jackets will play again
against Syracuse (away), but then pick up Florida State and Pitt at home and N.C. State and Virginia Tech on the road.