I like the idea of trying to get teams like William&Mary and Richmond on the schedule more often...two great programs with similar academics and both have tradition-rich football programs...I’d love to see the league office try and potentially add one if not both in the future...I think they would listen.
There's a lot to unpack.
The transfer protocol has far-reaching consequences, not the least of which is to high school athletes because of the growing number of schools that recruit other colleges as much as high schools. It's kind of a rapidly accelerating madness. The high school kids take any offer they can get and go to school they don't really have much interest in. Then, if an opportunity arises, they bolt.
My concern is that the rapid increase in the number of schools in a conference doesn't afford enough success to go around. It's bad for fans. How much harder is it for say, South Carolina, to succeed with the SEC adding more and more longtime, traditional powers? It's all about money, and it might be OK if it was just mostly about money. Do fans want rivalries to disappear? In recent years, Kansas stopped playing Missouri, Texas with A&M, Pitt with Penn State ... all the way down to Presbyterian and Newberry. Since my Laurens County site covers PC, my perspective may be skewed because the last 15 years at PC could be a Mel Brooks movie (or, perhaps, the basis of a novel by a sportswriter who likes to write them).
I may be the last believer in the SoCon. To me, it's got an admirable, appealing mix of private and state schools, with two military schools for good measure. I believe ultimately the mix is good. Once I dreamed of a SoCon of like-minded schools: Furman, Wofford, Citadel, VMI, Samford, Mercer, William & Mary, Elon, Richmond, etc., but I now think that would be a mistake.
Furman can compete in the SoCon. It has the right amount of diversity. It's everywhere else that college athletics is going wild.
I fly in the face of public opinion a lot. -- MD