Bradr
Starter
I had a thought here, and haven't seen it posted elsewhere. (But that doesn't mean much with how many posts there have been lately)
The most popular teams are also the ones with the history of the most success. As teams are more successful, they become more popular. As teams are less successful, they become less popular. If you are unsuccessful for too long, people will start to lose interest.
So if mega-conferences form, each of which has the best teams, some of those teams have to lose. If you put Florida, USC, Texas, and Ohio State into a hypothetical 4 man conference, someone is going to always lose at least 2 games. Thats a .500 record. You do that for too many years and you begin losing relevancy.
The way I see it is if these big conferences form, and they have the best teams, eventually some of those teams are going to be average. In 15 or 20 years when a new generation is watching college football, all they are going to know is that team x loses half their games on a regular basis. Maybe they were one of the greats in the past, but not anymore.
With all the talk going on, a Big 10 with Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and possibly Notre Dame and Texas is a meat grinder. Some of those teams are guaranteed losing at least 3-4 games. All have a history, but put them all together and someone has to be in last place every year.
So, do you think mega conference expansion is going to hurt college football by lessening the ability of teams to have winning records? There's a reason 50 some-odd teams would get left out of the 4 mega conferences - because they were the ones padding everyone else's statistics.
The most popular teams are also the ones with the history of the most success. As teams are more successful, they become more popular. As teams are less successful, they become less popular. If you are unsuccessful for too long, people will start to lose interest.
So if mega-conferences form, each of which has the best teams, some of those teams have to lose. If you put Florida, USC, Texas, and Ohio State into a hypothetical 4 man conference, someone is going to always lose at least 2 games. Thats a .500 record. You do that for too many years and you begin losing relevancy.
The way I see it is if these big conferences form, and they have the best teams, eventually some of those teams are going to be average. In 15 or 20 years when a new generation is watching college football, all they are going to know is that team x loses half their games on a regular basis. Maybe they were one of the greats in the past, but not anymore.
With all the talk going on, a Big 10 with Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and possibly Notre Dame and Texas is a meat grinder. Some of those teams are guaranteed losing at least 3-4 games. All have a history, but put them all together and someone has to be in last place every year.
So, do you think mega conference expansion is going to hurt college football by lessening the ability of teams to have winning records? There's a reason 50 some-odd teams would get left out of the 4 mega conferences - because they were the ones padding everyone else's statistics.