The past two summers, the SEC and the Big Ten have made some massive conference realignment moves with Texas and Oklahoma joining the SEC and USC and UCLA joining the Big Ten. If they aren’t already, the Big Ten and SEC are becoming the two premier conferences in college football with no other conference able to compete, and that could mark a problem for the future of the sport.
In an interview with the New York Post, American Athletic Conference commissioner Mike Aresco revealed that he sees the Big Ten and the SEC as already dominating college football.
“It’s the Power 2,” Aresco told The Post, “and everyone else.”
Aresco is concerned with all the teams, the talent, the money, and the attention on just those two college football programs, the rest of the teams and conferences across the country are at risk of becoming irrelevant, which could hurt the sport.
“This is probably the most critical time we’ve had in decades,” Aresco said. “That kind of consolidation [with two power leagues] really risks having the rest of the country being irrelevant. That’s what you can’t have. In the end, there will be less interest.”
Ultimately, conference re-alignment is going to change college football forever. Now, it’s just a matter of whether its for good or for worse.
About Kevin Harrish
Recent Posts
Articles
Daniel Jones and the Colts Still Have a Super Bowl Window
Articles
Patriots Fatigue Blinds You: Drake Maye Is a Super Bowl Threat
Eagles getting tired of Jalen Hurts
The Philadelphia Eagles are growing impatient
Bryce Young shatters Cam Newton record
Bryce Young is ascending
The pressure is on New York Giants ownership to pick the right coach
President, CEO, and co-owner John Mara can't afford another bad hire.
Edgar Wright’s ‘The Running Man’ is both better and worse than the original
The 2025 reboot is a vast improvement in terms of filmmaking, but the 1987 version is more fun.