Most college football conferences have divisions. The SEC started the trend in 1992, when it added a conference championship and needed a way to pick two reps. It made sense at the time.
But several conferences have grown to 14 teams. Thatās way too many for a division setup, since even a nine-game schedule means some teams go years without playing alleged conference rivals.
Really, every conference should get rid of divisions and just assign a few annual rivals. As youāll see below, this would preserve major rivalries, ensure every team sees its whole conference, balance schedules, and remove the risk of a weak team taking a spot in a conference title game.
(How would a conference handle a three-team tie for first place? However it wants, but Playoff rankings make business sense, since you donāt want your long shot spoiling your contenders.)
Since each conference has its own unique issues, here are custom proposals for the entire Power 5. Most non-power conferences could also adapt one of these.
1. We started with the SEC, since its rivalries are the most complicated. Most everybody liked our proposal.
Scrapping divisions in the 14-team SEC would mean we could protect three annual rivalries for each team, plus ensure every other matchup happened every other year.
Result: no major rivalries lost, and every team visiting every SEC stadium once or twice every four years.
Here were those annual rivalries Bill Connelly and I picked, and hereās a bunch more about our SEC plan, including our finding that this would make every teamās two-year schedule strength basically equal:

Here's the other conferences.
How to get rid of all CFB divisions
But several conferences have grown to 14 teams. Thatās way too many for a division setup, since even a nine-game schedule means some teams go years without playing alleged conference rivals.
Really, every conference should get rid of divisions and just assign a few annual rivals. As youāll see below, this would preserve major rivalries, ensure every team sees its whole conference, balance schedules, and remove the risk of a weak team taking a spot in a conference title game.
(How would a conference handle a three-team tie for first place? However it wants, but Playoff rankings make business sense, since you donāt want your long shot spoiling your contenders.)
Since each conference has its own unique issues, here are custom proposals for the entire Power 5. Most non-power conferences could also adapt one of these.
1. We started with the SEC, since its rivalries are the most complicated. Most everybody liked our proposal.
Scrapping divisions in the 14-team SEC would mean we could protect three annual rivalries for each team, plus ensure every other matchup happened every other year.
Result: no major rivalries lost, and every team visiting every SEC stadium once or twice every four years.
Here were those annual rivalries Bill Connelly and I picked, and hereās a bunch more about our SEC plan, including our finding that this would make every teamās two-year schedule strength basically equal:

Here's the other conferences.
How to get rid of all CFB divisions