A Decade of Realignment: College Football Needs Help

It’s now been a decade since the college football world chased the money. And all they have to show for it is the money.

fuck the acc
The past ten years have seen an exponential growth in revenue for college football, especially its powerhouse programs. Conference networks have launched and made money hand over fist. Fox jumped into the sport, adding another media giant with endless cash. The playoff was formed, tossing more money on the pile.

But on the field, the sport hit a nadir during the pandemic-plagued 2020 drudge of a season. The playoff has been reduced to Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State or Oklahoma (sometimes both), and a rotating fourth team. The games have rarely been close and TV ratings for bowl games have never been worse.

Even before the pandemic, ratings and attendance were trending down as the powerful got more powerful, the little guys were forgotten, and too many people stopped caring.

Most importantly, realignment meant the sport lost its soul. I’ve previously written about how college basketball was ruined by football-driven realignment, removing so many things that made the sport great.

Now, college football is being ruined. We’ve lost so many rivalries and games between neighbors, replaced by made-for-TV neutral site snores and conference championship money grabs.

We know everyone made money. But did any school actually benefit in any other way – namely on the field – from realignment? I’m glad you asked.

The Unqualified Success: Texas A&M

I’ve been wrong before and I’ll be wrong again. I was wrong about Texas A&M moving to the SEC. There was a wave of attention that swelled the Aggies' heads after their first two years of the SEC coincided with Johnny Football’s transcendent two years there. No other college athlete in the past decade, with the possible exception of Zion Williamson, moved the needle like Johnny Football did.

jimbo fisher good hire
When he left, I wrongly assumed they would descend back to the mediocrity that they resided in for the bulk of their Big 12 days. Instead, the school went all in with all that money, hired Jimbo Fisher from Florida State, and appear to be a legitimate Top 10 program for the foreseeable future. Most shockingly, they have actually escaped the shadow of Texas, no doubt aided by the Longhorns own descent into mediocrity. Funny how that happens.

The Call-Ups: Utah/TCU/Louisville

When the realignment wheel spun in 2011, TCU and Utah were two of the mid-majors, along with Boise State, that had previously crashed the BCS party. While Boise State got left out, these two got the call-up to the majors. Though neither program has fully realized its vast potential from those glory days a decade ago, they have remained fringe conference title contenders and they know the playoff is a possibility out there for an undefeated season.

For Louisville, the ACC was a lifeline out of the dying Big East and they’ve largely made the most of it, specifically with the Heisman-winning season of Lamar Jackson. While the jury remains out if they can continue to have success in football in the ACC, there’s no doubt the program is in better shape on the field than it was a decade ago before Charlie Strong righted the ship.

The Opportunity Takers: UCF/Houston/Memphis

The American Athletic Conference drove UConn fans crazy and may have killed the USF program. For these three teams, the AAC has completely revitalized these once-dormant programs.

They have combined for 4 New Year’s Six bowl appearances since the new system started in 2014, with UCF in particular becoming a national sensation in 2017. Thanks to residing in football-rich hotbeds, they have used their new status to boost recruiting and regularly compete on the field with Power Five teams. These three schools – along with Cincinnati – almost guarantees the AAC will retain a lock on the Group of Five bowl berth in the New Year’s Six for years to come, provided the desperately needed expanded playoff doesn’t come along first.

The Rodney Dangerfield Duo: BYU/Cincinnati

These two schools exemplify the odd new world that exists in college football. Both teams had their best years in a while in 2020, and the dominating storyline for both was the complete lack of respect shown to them by the playoff committee.

For BYU, the move from the Mountain West to the independence has led to up’s and down’s, and I still think they’d be better off joining the AAC as a football-only member. Still, the school will play five Pac-12 teams in 2021 as a West Coast version of Notre Dame’s agreement with the ACC. The school remains good at football, despite the conference merry-go-round.

As for Cincinnati, they are in a very similar spot to where they were at the tail end of the Big East, with an undefeated team that couldn’t quite crack the title game. Still, the program has thrived in the AAC. Thanks to UConn’s demise, they also become the likely next team up if/when Notre Dame joins the ACC full-time and they need a 16th school.

The Crippling Irrelevance:

If you’ve read this far, you’re probably thinking that realignment hasn’t been all bad. Well, keep reading.

Colorado

Thanks to the Big 12 divisional set-up, Colorado was a constant conference title contender. Thanks to the Pac-12 division set-up, it is not. Despite one strong year in 2016, the program is a complete outlier in the west coast conference. While Utah is as well, that school benefits from getting the call-up to the big leagues. Colorado was already there. They play no rivals on a yearly basis, and the fanbase has seemingly stopped caring about the program.

Missouri

When Missouri first joined the SEC, it looked like the program was on the verge of becoming a national player after back-to-back SEC East titles. But it was fool’s gold, due to the shocking fall of Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee at the same time. Though the Volunteers remain a disaster, Florida and Georgia have ascended back to the top of the division and in the comforts of the Top 10 nationally. Which leaves Missouri to be the definition of average without any real hope for a breakthrough anytime soon.

Maryland

You could argue Maryland has always been irrelevant in football and I wouldn’t argue too much. There’s a difference now, and that’s the lack of rivalry games and close road trips. Only Penn State qualifies as a rival, while the other eight games of the Big Ten schedule are versus teams that will always seem weird on the crawl in November. “Why is Maryland playing Indiana?” “Oooh, can’t wait for Maryland to play Minnesota.”

Pittsburgh/Syracuse

I lumped these two teams together because it’s basically the same story as Maryland, though both schools had much more past successes to get excited about before switching conferences. Since joining the ACC, neither team has been a top contender on a consistent basis and play a steady string of southern teams they have no history with.

West Virginia

In the last decade of the Big East, West Virginia was a national power, playing on New Year’s Day or in a BCS game nearly every year, led by Heisman contenders such as Pat White and Geno Smith. Since joining the Big 12, West Virginia is traveling more than any other sports team in the country – pro or college – and even lost its coach to a non-Power Five school. There are no rivals. There are no close road trips. It’s a hard sell at West Virginia now, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they fell down to the “disaster” category if I did this again in ten years.

Boise State

Technically, Boise State didn’t switch conferences during the Great Realignment of 2011. But it was supposed to. In fact, Boise’s move to the Big East and the apathetic ESPN response is how I ended up with my first viral blog post. Ahh, what a different time we lived in back then.

boise state 2010
Today, Boise State is simply irrelevant. Whereas they ended the first decade of the 2000s as college football’s most discussed team, no one care anymore. People forget that ESPN’s most-watched game in decades came on Labor Day night in 2010 when Boise State traveled east to play Virginia Tech as potential BCS crashers. That annual narrative drove Boise State to new heights.

But the college football system prevented them from becoming the football equivalent of Gonzaga. Despite winning the Fiesta Bowl in 2014, Boise State hasn’t played in a major bowl since and the AAC now has a firm headlock on that annual spot.

The Absolute Disasters

And now we hit the four programs that have bottomed out on the field due to realignment, starting with a trio of old Big East teams…

Rutgers

Rutgers is going to suck in football for the rest of time. Their brief dalliance with respectability happened a little over a decade ago, but it feels like another lifetime ago. In 2006 and 2007, big Thursday night wins by Rutgers were among the defining images of those seasons. Fast forward to today, and Rutgers exists to get its ass kicked by Ohio State and Penn State, and Michigan if they ever get their act together again. They have no rivals. They are in the Big Ten because they’re close to New York City and no other reason. They will make money hand over fist, but they won’t win many games.

sean oleary at uconn game
UConn

Does it get any worse over the past decade than UConn? They started the last decade by playing in the Fiesta Bowl on New Year’s Day. They ended it by throwing in the towel on the football program, leaving the AAC to save the men’s basketball program by retreating to the Big East. The program is now an independent like UMass, getting big checks in 2021 to get rocked by Clemson and UCF, and having nothing to play for. It’d be better for all involved if they dropped down to FCS.

USF

As with UConn and Rutgers, USF became a national story about 15 years ago in the reconfigured Big East. The program provided some of the best memories in that timeframe, with the road win against Auburn and the home win against Pat White’s West Virginia in a sold-out NFL stadium on a Friday night. Their loss as #2 in the country – yes, they were once #2 in the whole country – to Rutgers was a defining moment in the wild and wacky 2007 season.

Today, USF is awful. They’ve gone through multiple coaches since the Big East disintegrated and their worst nightmare has come true as “little brother” UCF has become one of the best football programs in the country. Hope still remains for USF due to their location, but it’s a long, long road ahead.

Nebraska

I started writing this with Nebraska in mind, as the Cornhuskers became college football’s biggest joke over the past six months. Starting with the school threatening to leave the Big Ten to play during a pandemic through getting its butt kicked during the shortened 2020 season to the final indignity of actively trying to get out of a game versus Oklahoma next year.

When Nebraska first joined the Big Ten, it was heralded as a great move for all parties. Personally, I was skeptical at best. At that point, Nebraska had been irrelevant for 10 years. We are now at 20 years and counting since Eric Crouch led Nebraska’s last meaningful season. It’s been all downhill since then. And instead of dealing with Texas and Oklahoma, they ran into a conference that doesn’t care about them and has been dominating them easily for years.

Scott Frost was the latest potential savior, and his early returns suggest another failure. I don’t blame Scott Frost. Nebraska shouldn’t be in the Big Ten. Like so many other schools, they got their money and all they have to show for it is losing football games. 

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