Monday, May 22, 2023

Gheorghe Realigns: A Modest and Pointless Proposal

It's been a seismic several years in major intercollegiate sports (almost literally - the tectonic plates have shifted to conspire to bring UCLA and USC adjacent to Rutgers and Maryland in sport scheduling terms). And the noise continues unabated, the Big Ten and SEC extending their inexorable manifest destiny and creating chaos in their wake, the other major (for now) conferences scrambling to pretend to compete. 

Will Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and Arizona state join the Big 12 to make the best hoops league even better and create false hope for football glory (probably)? Will the addition of SMU and San Diego State make the PAC-12 a viable commercial entity and stop the conference's bleeding (nope)? What can the ACC do to stay relevant (if you have the answer, they'd love to hear from you, stuck as they are in a rights deal with ESPN that handcuffs the league until 2036)?

As usual, we have the answer, but not the solution. Let's start by acknowledging that moneyed interests will never allow the people to prevail. But still we beat on, a dinghy against the current, borne forward ceaselessly by our own flawless logic and well-turned phrasing. We'll offer ideas for consideration, fully aware that mismatched incentives and entrenched interests will render them dead on arrival. Still, one's intellectual fires must be slaked.

These aren't necessarily original ideas. Common sense is often just that - common, shared by many. Some of these notions aren't even new - we've already trod the road less traveled in this very pixelspace as it relates to some form of conference realignment (do enjoy the commentary of the Gheorghies in that thread - we invent the Guido League and the Papist Conference). It seems obvious, though, that something must give. 

What should give, says this humble blogger, is everything. The NCAA as we know it should go away, replaced by the following three-headed organizational construct (let's state for the record that we're only talking about what we currently know as Division I athletics - the NCAA remains a useful model for DII and DIII competition):

The Collegiate Football Federation (CFF) would run major college gridiron activities, in collaboration with the networks. Effectively, this would be everything that fits within the current Power Five conference structure, with a few puts and takes to include schools that want to participate (and are willing to pony up the necessary funding) like Notre Dame, Cincinnati, BYU, etc. Let's say we wind up with 80 teams in a mega-conference with eight regional divisions to make it easy to get to a 16-team championship tournament by taking the top two teams in each division.

Non-Power Five schools and those that currently fit that description that might choose to deemphasize a money-loser like also-ran big-time football would participate in a new FCS-like entity (Hello, Vanderbilt! Nice to see you, Kansas football! 'Sup Boston College!) that would feature robust competition but less financial commitment than would be required in the CFF. This division would have 174 teams, which we'd spread out regionally into 16 leagues - once again allowing for ease of championship management. We might see some current FCS teams drop into DII or DIII, which is fine - the point of this entire exercise is to get colleges of the arms race treadmill to nowhere that's inevitably going to reward the rich and bankrupt the poor and return to a more balanced and rational experience for students that happen to be athletes. 

In this world, we would eventually see a William & Mary in the same league as Old Dominion, James Madison, Towson, Richmond, and Navy, among others - a sane return to a compact league. You could play the same game with Rice, who'd play SMU, North Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas State, Tulane and so on rather than traveling to Annapolis, Philadelphia, Boca Raton, and Harrisonburg to play roadies.

Hoops is a little bit of a simpler animal. We're just going to lift and shift the current Division One teams  into a new organizing body, empowered to continue to run the NCAA tournament while also creating a more rational divisional structure that maximizes competition and optimizes travel. Same 351 teams, both men and women. Same tournament setups. To a large extent, the same conferences (though UCLA and USC have to go back to the PAC-12 for hoops).

Every other sport (at a school like Texas, for example, that's 16 programs once you remove football and men's and women's basketball) is organized in the Olympic Sports Governance Council (OSGC - just go with it, man, I don't make up the names, just report them). We've already mooted a version of this, as seen in the link above. It makes absolutely zero sense for UCLA to send its tennis team to New Brunswick, NJ to play a conference match against Rutgers, and vice versa. Maryland's field hockey team, as good as it is, shouldn't need to incur the costs of traveling to Lincoln, NE for a league match when they can get great league competition in D.C., Chapel Hill, Charlottesville, Happy Valley, Philly, and Princeton. (Stanford competes in the America East in women's lacrosse. Stanford! The America East! They played away matches against Albany, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and UMASS - Lowell this season! Fucking bonkers, y'all)

No, the sports generally considered "non-revenue" in the accounting-driven parlance of the current NCAA will find a much more rational structure that emphasizes regional play, student welfare, and cost reduction, re-emphasizes local/regional rivalries, and still allows for national competition for the teams and schools that thrive in their leagues.

This is a hurriedly dashed-off musing about what a new system of intercollegiate athletics might look like. There are certainly flaws with the plan (the most glaring of which is the idea that any current athletics administrator or university president would willingly choose to move their football program "down" to an "inferior" division), and I harbor no illusion that it'll come to fruition. That said, I would not be surprised if the networks and major conferences break from the NCAA, at least as it comes to football, and in that scenario, those on the outside looking in would be well served to find a new model.

Winter's coming. At least if you're a middling ACC football program. Better put on your coat.

30 comments:

Whitney said...

Oh. I was hopeful from the post title that we were going to have some divisions created within the GTB and gheorghies roster. Dang it.

Good stuff, tho.

zman said...

Oooh, Gheorghe divisions. Like the Sick Division and the Rude Division? Or do we want to be pejorative?

rob said...

like coolville versus dorkville? that didn't go over all that well, as i recall.

Whitney said...

Everything is on the table. Geographic (kinda boring), height (also boring but less so), amount of head hair, lifestyle (aka beer drinking), music tastes, sports allegiances, or maybe just by the amount of GTB content issued.

Keep chattering...

rob said...

i like beer

Whitney said...

Marls' Miami Marlins are 15-2 in 1-run games.

And 9-21 in games that aren't as close.

Means nothing, but it's a curiosity.

Whitney said...

Also, it appears that there's a sporting chance that the soon-to-be-not-Oakland not-terribly-Athletics are going to set the modern day record for MLB futility. Check out the misery of their 10-38 start, and there seem to be no signs of life.

rob said...

at least they’re drawing 2,500 or so fans per game

rob said...

bomani jones dropped a thoughtful, unsparing, and honest appraisal of the totality of jim brown's legacy on his podcast today. highly recommend, and i wish more in the sports media were this nuanced: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/its-only-a-mans-world/id982639043?i=1000614012602

Mark said...

Unbelievable first half by LeBron. Truly remarkable. And now Jokic shows up and is matching him. Special stuff.

rob said...

in an unexpected development, my kid has become a big nuggets fan. she texted me (i watched the end of the game from bed) this after the game: SWEPT THE LAKERS. NUGGETS TO THE FINALS FIRST TIME EVER.

so this is a fun thing.

Danimal said...

i realize i probably have the least amount of cred when discussing a bron vs mj discussion but here goes anyway. watching much of last half of nuggets/lakers this morning in gym (was replayed on espn), it is hard for me to imagine an mj team allowing an opponent to get back in contention in a playoff game when up 15 points at half, and in the off-chance it did happen, no way they win, the opponent that is. and then in a post game interview, lebron is smiling if not laughing - i didn't have the benefit of volume so no idea what the context was. but i immediately though of mj and what his demeanor would have been in a press conference after a playoff loss that ended their season. that is all.

rootsminer said...

The players don't seem to want to kill each other anymore. Bring back the Laimbeers and Oakleys.

Marls said...

Dan - I’m an MJ guy as well, but to be fair at the when MJ was the same age as Lebron, he was playing on a Wizards team that failed to even make the playoffs two years in a row. You can blame a lot of that on his supporting cast but it’s not like he willed them to greatness.

Whitney said...

That Supporting Cast:
Courtney Alexander
Kwame Brown
Hubert Davis
Richard Hamilton
Brendan Haywood
Popeye Jones
Michael Jordan
Christian Laettner
Tyronn Lue
Tyrone Nesby
Bobby Simmons
Etan Thomas
Jahidi White
Chris Whitney

T.J. said...

that's quite the squad

rob said...

blatant excuse to reintroduce chris whitney to the mainstream discourse

Danimal said...

i thought i said "in a playoff game", and thus on a "playoff team".

Donna said...

I don't know what gives "cred" to make an argument re: these things, but here's my take ~
Kareem is the answer. He's the best person of them all. For me that's the final criteria. To stay a good human, and in his case, a fabulous one, in the milieux in which they live and move, that tops it. And he's a pretty decent writer, too.

That Dave's family knew Jim Brown personally is about the coolest thing I've heard all year.

That Wizards team MJ was on, you'd think they'd become a powerhouse... Bless Kwame Brown's heart, though, I remember the story about how he didn't know how to take care of himself, live in his apartment, do laundry or even take it to dry cleaners, etc.

Our 5-year old Subaru Outback -- the radio/audio/entertainment center touchscreen is kaput! Sure glad the finance people at Reynolds dealership talked us into the best warranty they offer because it's fully covered. Too bad it's backordered. But once it arrives, we get it fixed for free.

That's what's going on around here this day that our oldest turns 20!! And our daughter is still recovering -- pretty well, but wow this was a big surgery and recovery is long.

And the church I serve is making me crazy. Hope y'all are having a good week!

Marls said...

Dan, I know and and as I said, I’m team MJ. My only point was that at the same age, MJ was unable to drag a team into the playoffs let alone get to the conference finals. Yes, Lebron and the league are a different animal today than they were 20 years ago, but he is still a 40 year old that got a shit team deep in the playoffs.

Whitney said...

He’s 38. Unless you want to be known as a fiftysomething, Marley Marls.

rootsminer said...

Whit makes a good point, Marls.

My wife is currently at the ER, supporting the spouse of a coworker who took a bad fall chasing after a student that ran away. She didn't see it happen, but came out to see her receiving cpr and being immobilized. Send your best energy this way and count your blessings.

Donna said...

Oh gee, all the good thoughts and prayers coming y'all's ways for this coworker. I hope they are okay. How scary! And for your wife, too. Best y'all ~

rootsminer said...

Unfortunately the coworker passed away, leaving behind a husband and 10 year old son. Hug your people. Tomorrows are fleeting.

rob said...

that’s awful. sitting here talking to my wife, who’s had to chase a couple of kids this year. never even considered that it could be dangerous. my god.

rootsminer said...

Dr says it could have been heart attack, stroke, embolism, or spinal injury. They won’t know til autopsy.

My wife didn’t see it happen, but was the one to contact the husband, and then support him through breaking the news to his in laws and 10 year old.

Whitney said...

I'm sorry, my friend. Horrible.

Danimal said...

That is awful Rootsy. Terribly sorry.

Danimal said...

I grant you that Marls... 38 MJ vs 38 LJ goes to LJ.

Some of you watched the PGA Championship last weekend. The story of tourney was the club pro that finished top 15, Michael Block (the dude that had the ace). On Sunday he received an exemption to play in this week's tourney. A life changing two weeks for he and his fam, especially if he plays well enough to make another cut. Am guessing he made 2 years worth of pay last week, not to mention what it's going to do for him going forward.

rob said...

new post up. moose, etc.