The State (Sunday)

Super League idea puts Clemson, USC in same division

- BY CHAPEL FOWLER cfowler@thestate.com

An 80-team “Super League.” European soccer-style relegation.

Television money distribute­d to players via NIL.

Clemson and South Carolina in the same division?

Those details are the vision of College Sports Tomorrow, a group of influentia­l sports leaders who’ve been pitching conference leaders and other key college football stakeholde­rs on a bold new plan that would modernize but forever change the structure of the sport.

College football is currently in a evolutiona­ry period defined by NIL, the transfer portal and, most prominentl­y, sweeping rounds of realignmen­t that have dramatical­ly altered the sport’s conference­s and done away with a number of historic rivalries as schools try to stay afloat in a billion dollar enterprise. The NCAA has faced significan­t criticism for its handling of modern college sports.

College Sports Tomorrow is aiming to fix some of those issues with a dramatic proposal.

The Athletic first reported on the details of the Super League on April 3, but the plan went fully viral Tuesday on social media after the sports business website Sportico published a story revealing new details about the proposal, including the suggested geographic breakdown for the league.

Sportico’s Daniel Libit and Eben Novy-williams say they obtained a confidenti­al slide

show “pitch deck” that College Sports Tomorrow circulated to stakeholde­rs in mid-february that revealed, among other details, that the group is pitching an 80-team league with eight 10-team “divisions” arranged geographic­ally.

In the proposal, longtime rivals Clemson and South Carolina are paired together in the super league’s “Southeast Division” with six other current ACC schools (Duke, Florida State, Miami, N.C. State, North Carolina and Wake Forest), one other current SEC school (Florida) and one current Big 12 school (UCF).

Under the plan, per The Athletic, the changes apply only to football (the clear revenue driver in college athletics), and other sports would “stay in their current conference structure.”

The proposal’s seven geographic divisions are “permanent” and made up of current Power Five schools, with an emphasis on keeping traditiona­l rivalries in place or rekindling those that have been affected by the past decade of college football realignmen­t.

The eighth and final division will be made up of teams from the “Under League” (Group of Five schools), with eight of the 10 teams in that division rotating out annually based on results from that league’s playoffs.

Every team in the super league would play 14 regular-season games across 15 weeks before qualifying teams participat­e in a 16-team, bracket-style playoff over a five-week period (with flexibilit­y to eventually expand to a 24-team playoff).

The playoff teams would be the eight divisional winners and eight wildcard teams as determined by set tiebreaker­s (similar to the NFL) with no selection committee.

Here’s a full list of proposed divisions under the Super League (which, as noted by The Athletic and Sportico, faces significan­t hurdles and realistica­lly couldn’t come to fruition until some time in the 2030s because of Power Five conference­s’ current TV contracts):

COLLEGE FOOTBALL SUPER LEAGUE DIVISIONS

West: Arizona, Arizona State, Cal, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA, Southern Cal, Washington, Washington State

Southwest: Arkansas, Baylor, Houston, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, SMU, TCU, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech

Plains: BYU, Colorado, Iowa, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Utah, Wisconsin

Midwest: Cincinnati, Illinois, Indiana, Louisville, Michigan, Michigan State, Missouri, Northweste­rn, Ohio State, Purdue

Northeast: Boston College, Maryland, Notre Dame, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, Virginia, Virginia Tech, West Virginia

Southeast: Clemson, Duke, Florida, Florida State, Miami, NC State, North Carolina, South Carolina, UCF, Wake Forest

South: Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, LSU, Mississipp­i State, Ole Miss, Tennessee, Vanderbilt

Under League Division: Boise State, James Madison, Liberty, Miami Ohio, New Mexico State, Toledo, Troy, Tulane, UNLV, UTSA (temporary)

In the Super League model, eight teams from the Under League will be “relegated” back to the Under League based on results and eight other teams from that league will be “promoted” into the Super League in their place based on playoff results in that league. A number of popular European soccer leagues, including the Premier League, have used this model successful­ly.

The Under League, Sportico reported, will be organized into eight divisions of seven teams, which were not detailed in the slide deck the website obtained.

The College Sports Tomorrow model also proposes a name, image and likeness setup in which players get shares of a “collective­ly bargained ‘FB Player Pool’ ” that comes from the Super League’s television revenue and is organized by seniority (5% to all rostered freshmen, 15% to sophomores, 30% to juniors and 50% to seniors and graduate students).

The model, per the pitch deck obtained by Sportico, also “encourages studentath­lete persistenc­e” and lays out a stricter transfer portal format “to increase odds of graduation and simultaneo­usly creating an even greater incentive for schools to invest in, retain, develop and graduate players.”

The proposal faces a number of hurdles in getting off the ground. The Athletic reported that conference­s have been hesitant to meet with CST leaders on the proposal as to not upset their current broadcast partners, and all of the top conference­s have signed TV media deals through at least 2029 (as well as a massive extension with ESPN to broadcast a 12-team College Football Playoff for six years starting this fall).

CLEMSON AND USC TOGETHER AGAIN?

A Clemson-south Carolina pairing in the Super League’s “Southeast Division”

would create an interestin­g dynamic for two teams who have not shared a conference or division since 1971.

The Tigers and the Gamecocks were both charter members of the ACC starting in 1954 and competed as conference foes for 19 years until USC left the ACC. South Carolina competed against Clemson as an independen­t until joining the SEC in 1991.

Clemson and USC boast one of the nation’s fiercest and longest-running football rivalries. In fact, before the SEC opted for a conference-only schedule in 2020, blocking the teams from playing that year amid the COVID pandemix, they’d played 111 seasons in a row from 1909-2019, the secondlong­est active streak behind Minnesota-wisconsin (1907-present).

South Carolina’s SEC status has long been seen as an advantage Clemson can’t offer to recruits, so the Gamecocks understand­ably haven’t been thrilled about the idea of their rival Tigers joining the SEC over recent rounds of realignmen­t.

USC’S former athletic director, Eric Hyman, told The State in 2022 that USC made it clear it didn’t want Clemson in the SEC during a 2012 realignmen­t cycle that eventually saw the SEC bring in Texas A&M and Missouri.

During recent rounds of college football realignmen­t, which have seen the SEC and Big Ten emerge as the premier “destinatio­ns” over the past few years, South Carolina leaders have also lobbied against Clemson as an expansion candidate, per various national reports.

The Tigers remain in the ACC, where they’ve been a member for 71 years, but took the major step last month of suing their own conference in an attempt to break out of the league’s grant of rights and explore potential moves to other conference­s to increase their revenue long-term.

 ?? SAM WOLFE Special To The State ?? South Carolina quarterbac­k Spencer Rattler (7) is chased down by Clemson linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (54) during the second half of South Carolina’s game against Clemson at Williams-brice Stadium in Columbia on Nov. 25, 2023.
SAM WOLFE Special To The State South Carolina quarterbac­k Spencer Rattler (7) is chased down by Clemson linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (54) during the second half of South Carolina’s game against Clemson at Williams-brice Stadium in Columbia on Nov. 25, 2023.
 ?? SAM WOLFE Special To The State ?? South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer speaks with Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney following South Carolina’s game against Clemson at Williams-brice Stadium in Columbia on Nov. 25, 2023.
SAM WOLFE Special To The State South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer speaks with Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney following South Carolina’s game against Clemson at Williams-brice Stadium in Columbia on Nov. 25, 2023.

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