TP, I'm with you on the points thing and see where that would piss a lot of people off in a hurry. Sort of like the way the big 12 played out a few years back. I think Texas was the benefactor of that set up.....
If we were to go North and South I think it could be done and still keep Bama and the Barn in the same division, without any problem. I think the Aubs might would lose UGA and we would possibly lose UT, but we could pick up UF........Basically make the Tennessee line the border.
Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Miss St, Ole Miss, LSU, aTm
Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Mizzou, USCjr, UT, Vandy
Those divisions would make more logical sense, especially if we do away with cross division rivalries on a 9 game schedule.
Having said all that. I think we could maintain our cross division with UT and rotate the 2 others in the opposite division with a home/home rotation much like what has been done and that would allow you to play all the schools before you leave (unless you leave in 3 years).
Once we go to 16 team super conferences.....all bets are off. I think we will have to do the 9 game conference schedule and rotate 3 from the opposing division and rotate them on and off in a home/home series.
There's one aspect you haven't touched on here but do bring to mind. It's something a lot of fans don't take into consideration. They'll beat around the point, but not in the terms I suspect it'll be looked at within the SEC ranks.
The "haves" and "have not's."
That isn't my terminology. It is how the SEC schools' administrators referred to schools when the original divisional split was instituted in the early '90's. They purposefully took the "haves" and split them. (Haves= schools with a lot of demonstrated success from their athletic departments.) That's why we saw a three and three split with LSU, Bama, and Auburn falling in the West.
Sure, it's almost geographical if you take a few turns with your dividing line for Auburn and Vandy.
I had an LSU fan suggest moving Bama and Auburn to the east and moving Vandy and Mizzou to the west. He said, "here's a simple solution." Well, it's not.
Now, you'd be left with Bama, AU, UGA, UF, and UT all in the east and leaving LSU as the lone original member of the six in the west. I'm sure LSU fans would love that. I am equally sure UofSC fans would hate it.
It would make sense geographically, but the conference isn't divided that way.
Back to your thoughts on N and S. Yes, I'd agree with the notion. But, here again it's going to have to be split differently. In your case we're putting UF, LSU, Bama, and Auburn in the south versus two of those original six in the north.
(There's room for argument that UofSC and A&M might be part of the "haves" at this point. But, demonstrable proof isn't there yet.)
Keep in mind what the B1G has done in this story.
They were right to pick names for the divisions that weren't geographical when the split. The were stupidly wrong when they chose the names they did.
Now, going to the east and west it makes more sense. But, then we see they've put Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, and Penn State in the same division. That leaves a murderous row of schools like Purdue, Iowa, Illinois, or Minnesota for a team like Wisconsin or Nebraska to navigate through to get to the championship game.
That's far from an equitable division in my eyes.