Current:Home > reviewsSurpassing:Greg Sankey keeps door cracked to SEC expansion with future of ACC uncertain -Wealthify
Surpassing:Greg Sankey keeps door cracked to SEC expansion with future of ACC uncertain
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-10 13:59:12
Greg Sankey’s pithy line means squat.
“Sixteen is Surpassingour today, and 16 is our tomorrow,” Greg Sankey said Monday to begin SEC media days in Dallas.
OK, Mr. Commissioner. We won’t expect you to raid the ACC tomorrow.
But, what about the day after tomorrow? Next month? Next year?
While Sankey’s line about the SEC’s membership number is open to interpretation, I heard no commitment for the SEC to remain at 16 members for any period longer than 24 hours.
Whether the SEC will consider further expansion hinges on the ACC.
If the ACC fractures, I don’t believe the SEC would sit on the sideline while the Big Ten calls dibs on the tastiest items up for bid in a Southern fire sale.
Florida State and Clemson are suing the ACC. Lawsuits are not the hallmark of a harmonious league. The Seminoles, in particular, has made it clear that it plans to leave the ACC.
While the realignment carousel twirled these past few years, ACC membership remained locked into place by a sticky grant of rights deal that runs through 2036. Because of that contract, the ACC avoided defections while the Pac-12 crumbled and the SEC plundered Oklahoma and Texas from the Big 12.
The ACC’s brotherhood, though, is only as strong as its grant of rights contract.
“Agreements have been signed and decisions have been made among a conference, (the ACC),” Sankey said, a reference to the ACC’s grant of rights, “and the question is, are those going to be honored as they were established?”
The other question is, where would top ACC members go?
If you’re an ACC member dissatisfied with the conference’s revenue distribution, like FSU is, the Big Ten or the SEC are avenues to a richer future.
Greg Sankey keeps door open to more SEC expansion
Given the opportunity to clarify whether “16 is our tomorrow” means literally tomorrow or whether that’s a commitment to stay at 16 members long-term, Sankey dodged and demurred.
“I have a responsibility to pay attention (to what happens elsewhere), and I’m certainly not going to fuel speculation on what happens next," he said. "We can certainly remain at 16 for a long, long time and be incredibly successful.”
Sure, the SEC could remain at 16 members, just like it could have remained at 14 members.
The SEC pounced, though, in 2021 when Oklahoma and Texas became available because of an expiring Big 12 media rights deal.
The SEC is a pacesetter, not a spectator, in conference realignment.
No twofer from the ACC would match the value of Texas and Oklahoma. That doesn’t mean, though, that the SEC would turn up its nose and be a bystander while other conferences grew and strengthened at the ACC’s expense.
The SEC can be selective, but not complacent.
If ACC fractures, North Carolina and Florida State stand out
Which ACC schools might interest the SEC?
“We’re focused on our 16. Period,” Sankey said.
So I've heard. But ...
“You can see how we’ve made decisions over the last decade-plus for contiguous states to join," Sankey continued. "I think that’s incredibly wise. It provides remarkable strength. I’m not going to guess about what happens next.”
That’s my job. My guess: North Carolina, if available, would highlight the SEC’s wish list from the ACC’s football-playing membership. Virginia might get a sniff, too.
Never mind that those schools are not football blue bloods. Neither are Missouri or South Carolina. Past SEC expansions into neighboring states hint at how the conference might approach further expansion if the ACC unglues.
North Carolina and Virginia house strong athletic departments in growing Southern states.
And what of Florida State and Clemson?
There are already SEC schools in those states, but those are two major Southern football brands that cannot be ignored. I wouldn't expect the Big Ten to ignore them.
The Big Ten extends from coast to coast, but the SEC’s chief rival has not yet added a school in the South. If the Tigers and Seminoles escape the ACC, it would be foolish for the SEC to stand by and let the B1G snap up the ACC’s top football programs.
Sankey, throughout his Monday state of the conference address, adhered to a script that might as well have been titled “Sixteen Strong.”
“Our focus is on our 16 members,” an exasperated Sankey said in response to a third straight question about the possibility of more SEC expansion.
Sankey said the number “16” 17 times during his 50-minute news conference.
Sixteen today.
Sixteen tomorrow.
Eighteen, eventually? Or 20?
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's SEC Columnist. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer.
veryGood! (1731)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Former Twitter executives sue Elon Musk for more than $128 million in severance
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Blockchain Technology - Reshaping the Future of the Financial Industry
- Tesla evacuates its Germany plant. Musk blames 'eco-terrorists' for suspected arson
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Alabama Republicans to vote on nominee for chief justice, weeks after court’s frozen embryo ruling
- Texas Panhandle wildfires have burned nearly 1.3 million acres in a week – and it's not over yet
- TikTokers Campbell Pookie and Jeff Puckett Reveal the Fire Origin of Her Nickname
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- 'Effective immediately': University of Maryland frats, sororities suspended amid hazing probe
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Court rules Florida’s “stop woke” law restricting business diversity training is unconstitutional
- Hurt by inflation, Americans yearn for pensions in retirement. One answer may be annuities
- JetBlue scraps $3.8 billion deal to buy Spirit Airlines
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- A woman wins $3.8 million verdict after SWAT team searches wrong home based on Find My iPhone app
- Never send a boring email again: How to add a signature (and photo) in Outlook
- 'Love is Blind' Season 6 finale: When does the last episode come out?
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
LA County’s progressive district attorney faces crowded field of 11 challengers in reelection bid
'He just punched me': Video shows combative arrest of Philadelphia LGBTQ official, husband
San Francisco votes on measures to compel drug treatment and give police surveillance cameras
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Chick-fil-A tells customers to throw out a popular dipping sauce
GM recalls nearly 820,000 Sierra, Silverado pickup trucks over tailgate safety issue
James Crumbley bought his son a gun, and his son committed mass murder. Is dad to blame?