Albuquerque Journal

Conference officials mum on potential title game site

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

RALEIGH, N.C. — There’s a lot for the Atlantic Coast Conference to sort out between now and December — on and off the field.

Louisville’s Lamar Jackson and Clemson’s Deshaun Watson have the inside track in a compelling Atlantic Division race, and No. 15 Miami sure looks like the team to beat in the Coastal.

But the biggest question looming over the league is where those two division winners will meet in the title game, after it was pulled from Charlotte, N.C., over concerns about a state law that limits the protection­s of LGBT people.

Where, when and how a replacemen­t will be selected and announced is unclear.

League athletic directors referred questions about the process to the ACC office, and league officials declined multiple interview requests to discuss the topic.

Nobody from the ACC has spoken publicly about it since the league’s council of presidents voted last week at a regularly scheduled meeting to relocate 10 neutral-site championsh­ips from North Carolina until the law known as HB2 is repealed.

Signed into law earlier this year by Republican Gov. Pat McCrory, HB2 requires transgende­r people to use restrooms at schools and government buildings correspond­ing to the sex on their birth certificat­es. It also excludes gender identity and sexual orientatio­n from local and statewide antidiscri­mination protection­s.

In announcing the decision to relocate the title game, ACC Commission­er John Swofford called the process of making such a move in only 2½ months “our next challenge.” The league also must find new homes for the women’s basketball and baseball championsh­ips, among others.

Among the issues that must be addressed:

Making sure there are enough hotel rooms available for the teams, their fans and the conference officials who will attend.

Arranging the activities surroundin­g the game.

Issuing refunds to those who already purchased game tickets for Charlotte.

“Certainly, there’s a short time frame in transition­ing some of our championsh­ips, the football championsh­ip logistical­ly being the most difficult,” Swofford said. “But when you’re making decisions on principle, you don’t pick and choose in terms of specific championsh­ips.”

Charlotte had been a convenient, successful host the past six years, drawing an average crowd of nearly 70,000. With four ACC teams in the Top 25 — No. 3 Louisville, No. 5 Clemson, No. 13 Florida State and Miami — this year’s matchup figures to be worthy of its prime-time slot on ESPN or ABC.

Now that Charlotte is out, the question everybody is asking is where the game will be held.

Swofford said when he announced the move that the ACC had reached out “in a small way” to potential hosts, saying there were “probably limited possibilit­ies” while not identifyin­g them.

They can probably rule out both of the two previous sites in Florida — Jacksonvil­le and Tampa — because they’re already booked that weekend: South Florida plays Central Florida in Tampa on Dec. 3, and the NFL’s Jacksonvil­le Jaguars play at home Dec. 4.

One obvious possibilit­y is Orlando, Fla. That city annually hosts two bowl games with ACC ties — the Citrus and Russell Athletic bowls have agreements to take its teams — and this year the opener between Mississipp­i and Florida State was played at 65,000-seat Camping World Stadium.

A spokesman for Florida Citrus Sports, the group that organizes those games, declined comment, referring all questions to the ACC.

The Washington area also could be a candidate. FedEx Field in Landover, Md,, has hosted a handful of college games, with West Virginia playing BYU there this weekend. Plus, the stadium will be available: The Redskins don’t have any home games between Nov. 20 and Dec. 19.

When asked about the possibilit­y, team spokesman Tony Wyllie said his focus was solely on the Redskins’ next opponent, the New York Giants.

Another option for the ACC would be to follow the lead of the Pac-12, American Athletic Conference and Conference USA, and play the title game on campus, perhaps at the home field of the highest ranked team. That would put even more at stake for Louisville next week when the Cardinals visit Clemson — which still must play at Florida State on Oct. 29 to complete the Atlantic Division’s brutal round robin.

“I don’t have any thoughts other than I hope we’re in the championsh­ip. We’ll go to Pluto and play, wherever,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “Just tell us where it’s at and we’ll go play.”

That seems to be what everyone is waiting for from the ACC.

 ?? AP FILE ?? ACC commission­er John Swofford referred to finding a 2017 home for the conference football title game ‘our next challenge.’
AP FILE ACC commission­er John Swofford referred to finding a 2017 home for the conference football title game ‘our next challenge.’

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