| NEWS ACC Announces Football Schedule Model for 2023-26 - No more divisional play.

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GREENSBORO, N.C. (theACC.com) – The Atlantic Coast Conference announced Tuesday a new football scheduling model that will go into effect beginning with the 2023 season. The new model is based on a 3-5-5 structure whereby each team will play three primary opponents annually and face the other 10 league teams twice during the four-year cycle, once at home and once on the road. The schedule allows for each team to face all 13 conference opponents home and away at least once during the four-year cycle. The structure was adopted by the league’s athletic directors and faculty athletic representatives earlier today.

The new schedule will eliminate the Atlantic and Coastal divisions with all 14 schools competing in one division beginning in 2023. The top two teams based on conference winning percentage will compete in the Subway ACC Football Championship Game on the first Saturday in December at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. In May, the NCAA Division I Council approved the deregulation of the current rule that had limited an individual conference's autonomy to determine their football championship game participants.

“The future ACC football scheduling model provides significant enhancements for our schools and conference, with the most important being our student-athletes having the opportunity to play every school both home and away over a four-year period,” said ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips, Ph.D. “We appreciate the thoughtful discussions within our membership, including the head football coaches and athletic directors. In the end, it was clear this model is in the best interest of our student-athletes, programs and fans, at this time.”

A special one-hour edition of The Huddle will air on ACC Network on Tuesday at 7 p.m. to discuss the new scheduling format. The show will be hosted by Drew Carter and feature analysis from Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel and Mark Richt.

The three primary partners for each ACC team are as follows:

Boston College: Miami, Pitt, Syracuse
Clemson: Florida State, Georgia Tech, NC State
Duke: North Carolina, NC State, Wake Forest
Florida State: Clemson, Miami, Syracuse
Georgia Tech: Clemson, Louisville, Wake Forest
Louisville: Georgia Tech, Miami, Virginia
Miami: Boston College, Florida State, Louisville
North Carolina: Duke, NC State, Virginia
NC State: Clemson, Duke, North Carolina
Pitt: Boston College, Syracuse, Virginia Tech
Syracuse: Boston College, Florida State, Pitt
Virginia: Louisville, North Carolina, Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech: Pitt, Virginia, Wake Forest
Wake Forest: Duke, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech
 
3 P5 ( in name only) within 42 miles....that’s incredible...lol
Wonder what the radius for lsu or A$M ...or Arkansas ...or Kentucky is...to have 3
No, it's better than that. It's 82 miles to Winston-Salem and Wake. They are the outsiders who break the average. If you just count Duke-UNC-NCSt, Duke-UNC are just under ten miles apart, and NCSt is a whopping 24 miles away from Duke and 25 from UNC. I know we're talking football, but having them all within 25 miles feeds the crazy up there for basketball. I get up there periodically to W-S and Raleigh (I was there yesterday), and the UNC grads just say "Chapel Hill" like Bama says "The University", and you can feel the other alums chafe and cringe. I love it.

EDIT: As to SEC proximities, UA-MSU will remain the closest at roughly 84 miles. TX-aTm is about 107.
 
No, it's better than that. It's 82 miles to Winston-Salem and Wake. They are the outsiders who break the average. If you just count Duke-UNC-NCSt, Duke-UNC are just under ten miles apart, and NCSt is a whopping 24 miles away from Duke and 25 from UNC. I know we're talking football, but having them all within 25 miles feeds the crazy up there for basketball. I get up there periodically to W-S and Raleigh (I was there yesterday), and the UNC grads just say "Chapel Hill" like Bama says "The University", and you can feel the other alums chafe and cringe. I love it.

EDIT: As to SEC proximities, UA-MSU will remain the closest at roughly 84 miles. TX-aTm is about 107.
So bama-msu-ole ms might make the tightest circle in sec?

For North Carolina schools...thats really a lot of major Universities snuggled together...amazing
 
Duke never leaves the state for their permanent opponents.
ACC didn't wait until 2023 to give them an easy schedule.

THE ACC

Toughest:
GEORGIA TECH (No. 3 nationally)

Easiest: DUKE (No. 82 nationally)

Not only is Duke’s slate the least difficult in the ACC ranks – it’s the easiest among all Power 5 programs. The Blue Devils get Northwestern and Kansas on the road in non-conference action, programs that combined for a 5-19 record last year and who are both predicted to finish at the bottom of their leagues. From across the ACC in the Atlantic, Duke adds a road game at Boston College to its annual clash with Wake Forest (a home game) thereby avoiding frontrunners Clemson and NC State all together. It also draws North Carolina at home.

 
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