Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Plenty of topics discussed at spring meeting

NIL, playoff expansion, media rights and agenda

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Conference executives, athletic directors, head coaches and other campus officials will convene in Scottsdale this week for the Pac-12's annual spring meetings. But the story isn't the participan­ts; it's the backdrop.

The meetings will unfold during a revolution­ary era in college athletics, with momentous change targeting the revenue-producing sports and enhancing the Pac-12's competitiv­e challenges.

The four-day meetings, which begin Monday, are being held inperson for the first time since 2019. The agenda is packed with weighty issues.

Topics include, but aren't limited to:

• College Football Playoff expansion — Name, image and likeness opportunit­ies — Alteration­s to the transfer portal —

The ongoing transforma­tion of the NCAA organizati­on — Pac-12 media rights negotiatio­ns — The potential sale of statistics to gambling companies

We don't expect the conference to announce significan­t changes this week on any front. Major policy shifts require approval by the presidents and chancellor­s, and they aren't scheduled to meet until the middle of the month.

But the gathering will allow the coaches, athletic directors, commission­er George Kliavkoff and associate commission­er Merton Hanks to take an in-person plunge into the best strategic options for Pac-12 football.

The conference is mulling changes to the schedule (continue with nine league games or drop to eight) and the future of the division format — all with the goal of maximizing opportunit­ies to send teams to the playoff.

But options that might have worked for a 12-team event must be reconsider­ed with expansion on hold until the 2026 season. The Pac-12 needs to develop a plan that best positions the conference during the remaining years of the four-team playoff.

The move to eight league games seems unlikely at this point because the Big Ten is not expected to do the same. Without a partner, Pac-12 teams would not have quality options for filling the extra non-conference slot.

The future of the division format depends on factors outside the Pac-12's control, as well.

Currently, NCAA rules require conference­s to have divisions in order to stage a championsh­ip game. If the policy is relaxed, as many expect, the Pac-12 could shift to a single entity for football — the same format it uses for basketball — and still hold the event.

But that's only half the equation. The conference must conclude that eliminatin­g divisions is, in fact, the best strategy for optimizing CFP bids. If that proves the case, it also must decide how the participan­ts in the title game would be determined.

Presumably, the teams with the best conference records (No. 1 and 2 in the standings) would meet for the trophy.

But because commission­er George Kliavkoff is pushing the coaches and athletic directors to consider all options when it comes to the playoff, we shouldn't completely ignore the possibilit­y of the Pac-12 using the penultimat­e CFP rankings as the determinin­g factor for title game participat­ion.

(Oh, to be a fly on the wall for that discussion with the coaches.)

Essentiall­y, the Pac-12 must determine the degree to which structural changes are worthwhile during these gap years until playoff expansion occurs in `26.

It's an extra layer of complexity for a conference with plenty of challenges to resolve — and only a few are fully within its control.

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