ESPN now has a (hugely) vested interest in perpetuating the supremacy of the SEC. It is an agenda they must push in order to meet the projected $1 Billion net worth of game inventory.
Basically, the ebb and flow of college football
Guy referred to, from ESPN's perspective, cannot be allowed. The SEC cannot fall into dotage like the Big Ten has, cannot fall out of that #1 slot. ESPN and parent company Disney have invested far too much in the SEC Network for this to happen.
How can they influence that? By ignoring or downplaying damaging stories that might affect the teams in which they have invested. Synthetic marijuana abuse at Auburn? It may be mentioned, a blip on the back end of a story on the way to a commercial break, but not much more.
But that's not all. ESPN has direct competitors to the SEC Network, the Big Ten Network being the current most-successful rival. In the interest of protecting their investment, a scandal on the order of Buying Cam Newton's services at Auburn might get very little attention, while a scandal on the order of trading memorabilia for tattoos at Ohio State may lead off SportsCenter for weeks.
Coverage of the fancy new facilities at Alabama - and they are damned fancy - will get glowing reviews, while even fancier facilities at Oregon - and they are fancier - will be mentioned but not praised. Why? Because the better the SEC schools look, the more likely high school athletes are to sign there. ESPN can, and will, exert their influence to recruit for the SEC out of sheer necessity. The better the athletes in the schools they've invested in, the more likely they are to be better, the more likely they are to warrant remaining the lead story, and the snowball keeps rolling.
It doesn't matter if you're an Alabama fan or an Oregon fan, this ESPN/SEC deal should cause you deep concern. Whittling away at the support other schools/conferences have across the country will ultimately hurt all of college football.
Whether you like them or not, college football needs a solid base of good teams throughout the country to remain healthy. That means that these teams, in no particular order, need to remain viable and in the national picture:
Washington
Stanford
Oregon
USC
UCLA
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Texas
Texas A&M
LSU
Michigan
Ohio State
Tennessee
Alabama
Arkansas
Georgia
Florida
Florida State
Miami
Notre Dame
Penn State
These teams must consistently remain, if not in the national title hunt, but in the national consciousness. Why? Because the entire nation is not going to watch SEC football when the audience in their area - the PAC-12, the Big Ten, the Big XII, whatever - has dried up because their local teams cannot and will not ever compete.
In addition to those blue-blood schools, you MUST have a base of contenders, from every conference, who can on a minimum once a decade challenge for their conference title, and occasionally break their way into the national conversation:
Arizona
Boise State
Boston College
California
Clemson
Colorado
Iowa
Iowa State
Kansas State
Michigan State
Missouri
North Carolina
Oklahoma State
Ole Miss
Oregon State
South Carolina
Texas Tech
Washington State
West Virginia
Wisconsin
That's, at minimum, 40 schools whose health and well-being are absolutely vital to the overall health of this sport. Granted, one quarter of the schools in my lists are in the SEC, but seven are in the Big Ten and another nine are in the Pac-12. And I may be missing some - this was a quickly thrown together list.
The SEC is dominant right now, and they're playing entertaining football. But they cannot, must not, be the only contending conference in the land. And there is very little guarantee that ESPN will do anything to maintain a balance of power. In fact, their investment in the SEC nearly guarantees they won't.
And that's the problem.