The SEC has submitted proposed changes to the Protect College Sports Act, and one amendment could have major implications for the future of conference realignment.
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While much of the conversation surrounding federal college sports legislation has focused on NIL, revenue sharing, athlete employment, and antitrust protections, there’s another battle happening behind the scenes. Based on the SEC’s proposed revisions—and the positions both Greg Sankey and the Big Ten have taken throughout this process—it appears the two most powerful conferences in college football want to preserve their ability to expand in the future.
Does this mean Florida State, Clemson, North Carolina, Miami, or other schools are about to change conferences? Not necessarily. But it does raise an important question: Why are the SEC and Big Ten pushing back against language that could effectively freeze conference realignment?
In this video, we break down:
The SEC’s proposed changes to the Protect College Sports Act
Why conference realignment language matters
Why the SEC and Big Ten appear to be aligned on this issue
What it could mean for the ACC, Big 12, and the future of college football
Why keeping expansion as an option may be more valuable than expanding today
If you enjoy college football analysis, conference realignment updates, recruiting news, and discussions about the future of the sport, make sure to subscribe and join the conversation in the comments.
Do you think conference realignment is actually over, or are the SEC and Big Ten simply waiting for the next opportunity? Let me know below.
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