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With the losses of Texas and Oklahoma, the Big 12 Conference was reduced from 10 to 8 teams. On September 10, the Big 12 announced that BYU, an FBS independent and full member of the non-football West Coast Conference (WCC), along with American Athletic Conference (The American) members Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF would join the conference no later than 2024–25. [12]
The college football realignment. The college football landscape will look different from last season, with teams shuffling to new conferences. Here is a look at what conferences added and lost teams:
While that move also won’t officially materialize until July 2024 (there’s also the College Football Playoff’s expansion to 12 teams in 2024), 14 FBS schools will officially move conferences ...
Football Independent (FBS) MAC: 2025 [33] UT Rio Grande Valley Vaqueros: Football No team Southland: 2025 [34] [k] Vanderbilt Commodores: Women's volleyball: No team SEC: 2025 [37] West Georgia Wolves: Beach volleyball No team ASUN: 2025 [38] Boise State Broncos: Full membership Mountain West: Pac-12: 2026 [39] Colorado State Rams: Full ...
College football conference realignment history. Here's a look at the moves that have affected college football's major conferences since 2010: Colorado and Nebraska leave the Big 12.
Realignment primarily benefits the Big Ten and the SEC, which will see increased revenue through media rights deals. The College Football Playoff contract with ESPN, worth $7.8 billion through the ...
The decade-long run of the four-team playoff format that started in the 2014 season has coincided with a financial boom for college football, another round of conference realignment and the ...
The 2010–2014 NCAA conference realignment was a set of extensive changes in conference membership at all three levels of NCAA competition—Division I, Division II, and Division III—beginning in the 2010–11 academic year. Most of these changes involved conferences in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of Division I.