Can college football teams really switch conferences to play in 2020 with their leagues closed?


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Nebraska program disagrees with Big Ten’s decision to suspend football season
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One of the sidebars that comes out of the cancellation palooza of college football on Tuesday is the possibility of rescheduling conferences – if only temporarily for one season. More specifically, the idea is that university football teams of conferences that would cancel their seasons would try to play on their own.

Nebraska coach Scott Frost suggested that his program this season would have ‘options’ playing in another league now that the Big Ten has canceled the 2020 season. This led to widespread speculation on social media regarding any number of schools jumping conferences to play just one season.

Both Ohio’s Ryan Day and Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh made strong social statements on Monday in support of playing the 2020 season. This while the Big Ten at least seems to be planning for a potential cancellation.

“It’s not optimal. Is it conceivable? Sure,” one Power Five executive told CBS Sports.

That can be a stretch.

A leading television executor told CBS Sports that Big Ten’s TV contract with the Big Ten Network, Fox and ESPN could prevent the Cornhuskers from becoming a ‘free agent’ for the 2020 season.

Such a restriction would be tantamount to awarding rights agreements in the Big 12 and ACC. Those grants bind TV rights of schools to a specific conference for a period of years. The ACC’s rights grant goes to 2036, while the Big 12’s last until 2025.

If a school leaves before these dates, the conference from which they are leaving would have their TV rights. That has been more than enough to keep those teams in place.

“It would be difficult” for Nebraska to move, the TV executive said.

Still, it’s fun to speculate. The Big Ten, Pac-12 and Mountain West plus UConn, Old Dominion and UMass have all canceled their 2020 seasons. The Big Ten, Pac-12 and MWC hope to play in the spring of 2021.

The Pac-12 canceled its 2020 season shortly after the Big Ten did Tuesday, leaving the ACC, Big 12 and SEC to decide whether to move or leave this season. The ACC has said it “absolutely” intends to play this season, while the SEC says its medical experts have given it the green light to play at the moment. The Big 12 has a hard time deciding.

Notre Dame has been a temporary member of the ACC for one year in 2020. It will add its $ 15 million payout from NBC into the league’s coffers and receive an equivalent piece of the total TV rights pie.

From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, commissioners suggested that if only a group of schools could move forward from a conference, it would be possible for them to play. Earne.

“It’s probably like Major League Baseball where you sign a free agent on July 31st, where you know you’ll only keep him through the playoffs,” the Power Five manager said.

Nebraska left the Big 12 for the Big Ten in 2011. Since then, its fans have occasionally longed for the days when the Huskers dominated the conference it attended, when it was named the Missouri Valley in 1907. Nebraska has not won a conference title since 1999.

What started as a rumor is at least now a talking point.

A Power Five coach contacted CBS Sports on Saturday night to inquire about the ideas that schools are participating in the Pac-12. Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby usually raised the issue on Sunday in a moment of joke and dismissed it out of hand with laughter.

“I do not know what is happening in the Big Ten, but I do know that there are certain schools that are not happy with the circumstance,” the Power Five administrator said.

“If you’re in a place that you want to consider playing, and your administration and state consider it OK to play, it’s your duty to do what you can to see how that can happen.”