With the future of college sports uncertain, one thing is clear: An official and permanent split of NCAA Division I is here
Division I has never been more fractured, and the split between the haves and have-nots in college athletics is becoming more real than ever.
Ross Dellenger
At a Knight Commission meeting in DC, Southern Conference commissioner Michael Cross presents a draft of a new NCAA governance model that divides DI into. - Subdivision A: P4 + those they wish to include -
Subdivision B: Others
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My assessment
1) split is for football and Men's BBall only as all the rest of the college sports are money losers
2) Select schools in non-revenue sports will also form super conferences - 10 to 50 schools by sport
3) The rest of the non revenue sports will play local and regional schedules to cut down on costs as well as buy games vs the super conferences
4) Colleges will cut back on the number of sports offerings- consistent with Title IX
5) Depending upon how the tv money is split up - some current P4 bottom dwellers may exit those conferences
6) Level of NIL funding may be a factor in which Subdivision you are in