With 14 teams, SEC scheduling could get sticky
Welcome to the Southeastern Conference, Missouri and Texas A&M. Come visit in a decade.
The newly-minted 14-team SEC faces potentially sticky scheduling issues if it goes to a larger divisional slate, tries to protect rivalries and keep marquee nonconference showdowns.
While most coaches and administrators say they want to stay with an eight-game schedule, extra conference games could generate more revenue and be more attractive to television partners.
SEC spokesman Charles Bloom said the conference will play eight games in 2012 and a nine-game slate ''hasn't been discussed.'' Vanderbilt vice chancellor David Williams said all the athletic directors are expected to gather soon to begin looking into next year's schedule in football and other sports.
''We have to look at our schedules in all of our sports and sort of now figure out how we integrate two more teams in,'' Williams said. ''Once Texas A&M was in, we were sitting around and we had a bunch of 13-team schedules. And once the Missouri thing sort of started to heat up, we kind of put those in a drawer for a while to see what happens.''
Williams said now that expansion appears to be at least temporarily on hold, all scheduling options will be reviewed.
''A lot of this has moved sort of quickly in the sense that we were already pretty much have a 2012 schedule in football, and football is the one you plan most ahead. Now we've got to figure about the 13th team and now we have to figure about a 14th team,'' Williams said. ''I think many of us are happy that we think we're at least at an ending point for now, and we can get on with making schedules and get back to that sort of stuff.
''All of those things will be looked at. I know the commissioner is trying to get a meeting together for us to sit down for a whole day and just go over the schedule.''
Athletic directors would prefer to keep an eight-game schedule, according to a person familiar with early discussions among those in charge.
The person said they like the current setup, the one that has led to five consecutive national championships. They want their extra home games, their non-division rivals and their non-conference rivals. And even though nine conference games could create more television revenue, the powerful league figures its pedigree is enough to command top dollar in any future negotiations.
A nine-game SEC slate would mean schools would have to give up one of their four non-conference games, most of which are played at campus sites. And that would cut into annual revenue, and there would be no guarantee that future television contracts would make up the difference.
Not to mention that a nine-game league schedule could make it more difficult to get two teams into the lucrative Bowl Championship Series. The SEC has placed two teams into the BCS in each of the last five seasons.
Currently, SEC teams play their five divisional opponents, one designated rival and two rotating teams from the opposite division to comprise the eight-game conference schedules. With two divisions of seven, there's one less game available in the opposite division.
If the rivalries are protected - and that appears to the priority - and the schedule stays in a similar format with just one rotating interdivisional opponent, it could mean Texas A&M would visit the other six SEC East stadiums once every 12 years.
''I'm big on tradition,'' said Tennessee coach Derek Dooley when asked if playing Alabama annually could end.
The other option would be to join other BCS conferences like the Pac-12 and the Big 12 and play a nine-game conference schedule, while the Big Ten will do the same beginning in 2017 citing the quality of playing conference opponents.
''I know there's a lot of models out there. That would be one of them. That's an easy way to preserve the rivalries, I'm sure,'' Dooley said.
A nine-league game model also could make it tougher for the SEC to fill its bowl commitments and some early season made-for-TV matchups, like LSU-Oregon and Georgia-Boise State, might not survive with programs needing seven home games to generate more revenue.
And while nine games would help the SEC ease the pressure of keeping in-conference rivalries and mean more cross-division opponents, half the teams would have an extra SEC home game each year and lose a nonconference foe.
''It would be a challenge,'' Auburn coach Gene Chizik said. ''We know what this league already entails. It's tough.''
South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier said a nine-game schedule shouldn't be a priority because it would threatened instate rivalry games. They are an especially sensitive subject, even in places like Kentucky, where the Wildcats and Louisville renewed their annual matchup in 1994 after a 70-year break. Neither side wants it to end.
''A lot of us have our in-state traditional rival. Georgia has Georgia Tech, Florida has FSU, we have Clemson,'' Spurrier said. ''I think in golf they call that rub of the green. That's just the way it is, they rotate it around. And sometimes, certainly scheduling plays a big factor.''
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AP Sports Writers Pete Iacobelli in Columbia, S.C., John Zenor in Auburn, Ala., Mark Long in Gainesville, Fla., Beth Rucker in Knoxville, Tenn., Teresa M. Walker in Nashville, Tenn. contributed to this report.