In the next era of college athletics, the Atlantic Coast Conference faces a defining crossroads. Imagine a 2030 landscape where Clemson, Florida State, Miami, North Carolina, and perhaps even Louisville exit for richer pastures. Even in that scenario, the ACC is far too valuable — institutionally, academically, and geographically — to simply collapse.
I humbly offer ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips and the conference’s member schools a blueprint not only to keep the league intact, but to position it to expand and thrive. The institutions that make up this conference are too significant, too powerful, and too valuable to ignore — and with that in mind, here is the plan.
The remaining core of academically elite, mission‑aligned universities would have the opportunity to rebuild the league into a modern, stable, academically driven national conference. Rather than chasing the SEC and Big Ten’s financial arms race, ACC 2.0 could re‑center itself around research excellence, institutional compatibility, and a coast‑to‑coast footprint that appeals to both ESPN and emerging streaming partners.
Why the Remaining ACC Schools Won’t Bolt for the Big 12
The Big 12 is aggressive, opportunistic, and well‑run — but it is not a natural academic or institutional fit for the ACC’s remaining members. Here’s why each school is better off staying:
Duke
Elite AAU academics
Basketball brand unmatched in the Big 12
Strong ESPN relationship
Big 12 offers no academic peers
Virginia
AAU powerhouse
Massive research footprint
Fits culturally with Stanford, Cal, Georgia Tech
Big 12 would be a step down academically
Virginia Tech
Strong football brand
Geographic anchor for the Mid‑Atlantic
Big 12 travel would be brutal
ACC stability + new markets = better long‑term value
NC State
Research Triangle identity
Local rivalries with Duke/UNC/VT
Big 12 offers no comparable academic ecosystem
Georgia Tech
AAU member
Atlanta market
Tech‑centric brand fits ACC’s academic identity
Big 12 lacks peer institutions
Pittsburgh
AAU member
Natural rivalries with Syracuse, BC, Notre Dame
Big 12 travel and time zones are a poor fit
Syracuse
Northeast media footprint
Basketball heritage
Big 12 is geographically and culturally misaligned
Boston College
Only Power conference school in New England
Massive media market leverage
Big 12 has no presence or value in the Northeast
Wake Forest
Elite private‑school academics
Big 12’s public‑school culture doesn’t match
ACC offers stability and peer alignment
Cal & Stanford
AAU giants
West Coast academic prestige
Big 12 is not an academic match
ACC gives them a national platform without compromising identity
SMU
Wealthiest donor base in the country
Texas recruiting access
ACC brand elevates SMU more than Big 12 ever could
Bottom line: The Big 12 is a good football league. The ACC is a university league — and that matters to these schools.
The New Additions: Why They Strengthen ACC 2.0
ACC 2.0 strategically adds USF, UConn, Tulane, Memphis, Rice, Army (football only), and Navy (football only) — each selected for academic alignment, media value, and institutional fit.
USF
AAU status
R1 research
New on‑campus stadium
#11 Tampa–St. Pete–Sarasota DMA
Massive NIL potential
Aggressive investment in sports
UConn
NYC–New England corridor
Elite basketball brand
Strong academics
Restores Northeast relevance
Football is on the upswing
Tulane
AAU‑level academics
New Orleans market
Rising football credibility
Memphis
Central U.S. footprint
Passionate fanbase
Strong recruiting region
Rice
AAU member
Houston market
Elite academic prestige
Army & Navy
National visibility
Tradition and patriotic appeal
Annual Army–Navy game becomes an ACC property
Together, these additions create a coast‑to‑coast academic‑athletic alliance unmatched outside the Big Ten.
Notre Dame: The Biggest Winner in ACC 2.0
Notre Dame remains a full ACC member in all sports except football, where it maintains independence. But in ACC 2.0, the Irish gain:
A league that mirrors Notre Dame’s academic identity
If anything, ACC 2.0 becomes the perfect home for Notre Dame’s Olympic sports — and the perfect partner for its football independence.
Why ESPN Stays Invested Beyond 2036
ACC 2.0 controls major markets including Boston, New York City, Washington DC, Atlanta, Tampa Bay, New Orleans, Memphis, Pittsburgh, Raleigh–Durham, San Francisco/Oakland, and Houston.
For ESPN, this means:
Year‑round content
High‑value basketball inventory
East Coast + West Coast windows
Service academy games
Notre Dame Olympic sports
Even after 2036, ESPN will want:
Inventory
Stability
National reach
Academic prestige
ACC 2.0 checks every box.
Why Apple, Amazon, YouTube, and DAZN Will Bid
The next media cycle will be dominated by streamers. ACC 2.0 offers:
National markets
Elite academic brands
Basketball dominance
Service academy tradition
Notre Dame adjacency
West Coast + East Coast time zones
Competitive Football programs already in the conference with up-and-coming new teams joining.
DAZN, in particular, is looking to plant a U.S. flag through its pursuit of Main Street Sports. ACC 2.0 gives them:
A national conference
A stable inventory
A premium academic brand
This is exactly the kind of league a streamer wants to anchor a long‑term sports strategy.
How the ACC Learned From the Pac‑12 Collapse
The Pac‑12 died because it:
Waited too long to understand their problems
Had no unified vision
Lost Los Angeles
Ignored streaming partners
Failed to expand
ACC 2.0 does the opposite:
Expands early
Adds major markets
Builds academic alignment
Creates national inventory
Embraces streaming
This is a conference built to survive. Thanks in advance to the ACC for looking at my suggestions and best of luck in the future.
Georgia head coach Kirby Smart speaks with Alabama head coach Nick Saban before the first half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
NFL Coaching Carousel Overview
Exactly one-quarter of the NFL’s 32 teams are looking for a new coach. And a few more could happen if contract extensions aren’t reached in the coming days.
Who’s looking? Who’s in line for the jobs? Here is a look at the eight current openings and the coaches who may fill them.
Atlanta
If QB Michael Pennix can get coached up properly and more importantly stay healthy this might be one of the best jobs available. That’s a really big if, however. The Falcons have really good skill players on offense and some good young players on defense. So who’s in line? It’s hard to say since the Falcons also need a GM. Keep in mind they flirted with Bill Belichick before hiring Raheem Morris, so a big name is not out of the question. This might be a reach, but is Georgia coach Kirby Smart tired of the transfer portal and NIL?
Arizona
What the new coach has to decide before he even gets the job is what to do with QB Kyler Murray. It appears the Cards are going to trade him and start over, but then who will be their next QB? Arizona’s recent MO suggests they will go for a hot coordinator so keep Buffalo OC Joe Brady and Seattle OC Klint Kubiak (if he wants to stay in the division) near the top of your list.
Baltimore
John Harbaugh hadn’t gotten out of the Ravens building yet when I got a text from a very reliable source that read “Jesse Minter to Baltimore, book it.’’ It’s a little ironic that Jim Harbaugh’s right-hand man in L.A. would take John’s job in Baltimore. Minter was with the Ravens from 2017-20 before joining Jim at Michigan as DC.
Cleveland
This might surprise some, but I truly believe the Browns win the Harbaugh Sweepstakes. If you fire a two-time Coach of the Year you better hire someone good. The Browns will be willing to give John what he wants in terms of money and control. And he gets to stay in the AFC North to play the Ravens twice a year. He also goes home to Ohio where he still has a lot of family.
Las Vegas
Looks like Tom Brady is going to be real involved and that could mean one-time Patriots assistant and former Falcons head coach Raheem Morris is on the way with former Giants head coach Brian Daboll as his OC. This is probably the least attractive job available, although you do have the No. 1 pick in the draft for what that’s worth.
Miami
John Harbaugh’s name will be mentioned here a lot. Former Green Bay Packers executive Jon Eric Sullivan was just named general manager of the Dolphins, however, which could lead to a Packers connection. The team’s defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley, who was also the head coach of Boston College, is a possibility. Hafley is on a few team’s list. Sullivan had been with the Packers since 2008, so there is also a connection to former Green Bay and Dallas head coach Mike McCarthy.
New York Giants
The Giants want Harbaugh, but are they willing to get rid of general manager Joe Schoen to get him. That might have to be a prerequisite. Former Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski, who will surface on a lot of lists, could be Plan B for the Giants and the Giants might actually be Stefanski’s preferred choice. That wouldn’t be the worst thing for QB Jaxson Dart.
Tennessee
This might be the best place for McCarthy and McCarthy might be the ideal hire for the Titans and young QB Cam Ward. Consider that in his career McCarthy revitalized Brett Favre, developed Aaron Rodgers and got the most out of Dak Prescott. This could be the most perfect marriage of the entire group.
There have been 59 Vince Lombardi trophies handed out, although it was not until 1970 that the “World Championship Game Trophy” was renamed the Lombardi Trophy following the death of the Green Bay Packers and Washington coach Vince Lombardi. The Lombardi Trophy will never be confused with hockey’s Stanley Cup when it comes to tall tales and legendary stories. But there is one tale that rivals that of some of the Stanley Cup stories.
The “World Championship Game Trophy” that was given to the New York Jets following the team’s Super Bowl III victory against the Baltimore Colts on January 12th, 1969 comes straight out of the Stanley Cup strange-but-true stories.
The Jets organization got the trophy in a postgame ceremony, but in all the excitement of winning, someone forgot to take the trophy back to New York. It sat in one of the locker rooms in the bowels of the Orange Bowl in Miami.
It was a story that could have been the equal of some of Stanley’s best tales, but the NFL doesn’t push the past history of the trophy.
“I am sure it was John Free’s (responsibility),” laughed one-time Jets trainer Jeff Snedeker years later in discussing who was supposed to be in charge of making sure the trophy accompanied the team on the trip back to New York. Free’s main job was making sure Jets quarterback Joe Namath got out of stadiums safely. No one was told to take the trophy and everyone seemed to follow orders. “He never did anything right.”
Neither Snedeker nor Free even knew the trophy was gone, but someone discovered the trophy was missing when the team got home.
“I remember the guy that either went to get it or brought it with him, his name was Tiger Ferraro,” said Snedeker. “I remember it was Tiger that brought it. I don’t remember if they sent him back or he was still there or they went back to the Orange Bowl.
“They did forget the trophy.”
Ferraro was sent back to Miami and retrieved the trophy, which was sitting all alone in the Orange Bowl. No one even bothered to move it after cleaning the locker room. Not even Stanley was left behind by a team in a dressing room and stayed overnight in a cold, damp locker room.
“Nobody expected us to win, so I guess they were not prepared to get the trophy,” said Snedeker, who as trainer might have been responsible for making sure everything was taken out of the room in Miami. “In the euphoria that followed the trophy, it was probably the least of anybody’s concern. Just that we got it, we didn’t have it physically was probably immaterial.”
The trophy eventually caught up with the Jets and was present during a New York City Hall celebration on January 11th, 1969.
An excerpt from the ebook: America’s Passion: How a Coal Miner’s Game Became the NFL in the 20th Century
Georgia head coach Kirby Smart speaks with Alabama head coach Nick Saban before the first half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
NFL Coaching Carousel Overview
Exactly one-quarter of the NFL’s 32 teams are looking for a new coach. And a few more could happen if contract extensions aren’t reached in the coming days.
Who’s looking? Who’s in line for the jobs? Here is a look at the eight current openings and the coaches who may fill them.
Atlanta
If QB Michael Pennix can get coached up properly and more importantly stay healthy this might be one of the best jobs available. That’s a really big if, however. The Falcons have really good skill players on offense and some good young players on defense. So who’s in line? It’s hard to say since the Falcons also need a GM. Keep in mind they flirted with Bill Belichick before hiring Raheem Morris, so a big name is not out of the question. This might be a reach, but is Georgia coach Kirby Smart tired of the transfer portal and NIL?
Arizona
What the new coach has to decide before he even gets the job is what to do with QB Kyler Murray. It appears the Cards are going to trade him and start over, but then who will be their next QB? Arizona’s recent MO suggests they will go for a hot coordinator so keep Buffalo OC Joe Brady and Seattle OC Klint Kubiak (if he wants to stay in the division) near the top of your list.
Baltimore
John Harbaugh hadn’t gotten out of the Ravens building yet when I got a text from a very reliable source that read “Jesse Minter to Baltimore, book it.’’ It’s a little ironic that Jim Harbaugh’s right-hand man in L.A. would take John’s job in Baltimore. Minter was with the Ravens from 2017-20 before joining Jim at Michigan as DC.
Cleveland
This might surprise some, but I truly believe the Browns win the Harbaugh Sweepstakes. If you fire a two-time Coach of the Year you better hire someone good. The Browns will be willing to give John what he wants in terms of money and control. And he gets to stay in the AFC North to play the Ravens twice a year. He also goes home to Ohio where he still has a lot of family.
Las Vegas
Looks like Tom Brady is going to be real involved and that could mean one-time Patriots assistant and former Falcons head coach Raheem Morris is on the way with former Giants head coach Brian Daboll as his OC. This is probably the least attractive job available, although you do have the No. 1 pick in the draft for what that’s worth.
Miami
John Harbaugh’s name will be mentioned here a lot. Former Green Bay Packers executive Jon Eric Sullivan was just named general manager of the Dolphins, however, which could lead to a Packers connection. The team’s defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley, who was also the head coach of Boston College, is a possibility. Hafley is on a few team’s list. Sullivan had been with the Packers since 2008, so there is also a connection to former Green Bay and Dallas head coach Mike McCarthy.
New York Giants
The Giants want Harbaugh, but are they willing to get rid of general manager Joe Schoen to get him. That might have to be a prerequisite. Former Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski, who will surface on a lot of lists, could be Plan B for the Giants and the Giants might actually be Stefanski’s preferred choice. That wouldn’t be the worst thing for QB Jaxson Dart.
Tennessee
This might be the best place for McCarthy and McCarthy might be the ideal hire for the Titans and young QB Cam Ward. Consider that in his career McCarthy revitalized Brett Favre, developed Aaron Rodgers and got the most out of Dak Prescott. This could be the most perfect marriage of the entire group.