Add Southern Methodist University to the list of schools that could further change the landscape of college sports.
The ACC is reportedly considering the idea of adding the Dallas-based school, in addition to California and Stanford. No further progress has been made after ACC presidents and athletic directors met separately earlier this week, and no new details emerged from a meeting of Cal’s board of regents.
The conference’s slow deliberation is also holding up the Mountain West’s own plans to explore expansion.
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey wants to reexamine how teams qualify for the financially lucrative, expanded College Football Playoff in the wake of conference realignment.
This season, conferences will receive $6 million for each team making a CFP semifinal, though it’s still uncertain how much a berth in the 12-team postseason will garner next year.
The original plan was to award playoff berths to the six highest-ranked conference champions and next six highest-ranked teams. “There are elements and specifics of what was decided when we had clarity around 10 conferences that might need to be adjusted,” Sankey said on “Paul Finebaum Show” this week, likely hinting at more SEC representation in the playoffs.
Meanwhile, Sankey said the SEC wasn’t actively recruiting any other schools for further expansion.
“We have this contiguous group that has a national platform,” Sankey said. “We don’t need to be in four time zones to generate interest on the West Coast.”
But Sankey wouldn’t rule out expansion in general if the right situation appeared. ACC schools Clemson and Florida State would easily fit into the conference’s current geographic footprint.
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