Best South Carolina high schools for athletes? According to one study, these are top 25
Discover the top 25 high schools in South Carolina for athletes according to a new study!
The ACC spring meetings commenced on May 11 at the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island, focusing on the expansion of the College Football Playoff (CFP). This annual gathering of athletic leadership aims to address key issues in collegiate athletics, including the future of football and basketball.
Mentioned in this story
ACC spring meetings begin with CFP expansion on top of everyone's mind
With the Atlantic Ocean draped in the background, the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island will be the most important location for the Atlantic Coast Conference as its spring meetings, which began May 11.
The annual meeting of member schools' athletic leadership and coaches, alongside ACC leadership, among others, has been ground zero for some of the formative changes of collegiate athletics in recent years.
In recent years, the meetings came with a backdrop that featured a legal squabble that pitted Florida State and Clemson against the ACC, but those matters have been settled, and now the conversation shifts to the future of two of the league's prized spots, football and basketball.
Conference leaders will dive into the potential of a 24-team college football playoff and what its application would look like for the league, and if there are any pathways to automatic qualifiers or guaranteed spots for schools.
Under the current format, Miami was the lone ACC bid to the 12-team playoff in 2025, earning the last at-large bid before making a run to the national title game. Multiple models have been suggested, but the preferred proposal voted on by the American Football Coaches Association's Board of Trustees would eliminate conference title games and have 23 at-large bids, with a sole automatic qualifier left for the highest rated group of six champion.
It's a topic that will be discussed heavily, not just at the ACC meetings, but across collegiate athletics in the coming months as expansion continues to dominate the headlines. The NCAA recently implemented a 76-team basketball tournament, replacing the 64-team model that has long been associated with March Madness, something that will generate millions more in revenue, the key piece to the future of college athletics in the post-House Settlement era.
The main topics include the expansion of the College Football Playoff (CFP) and the future of football and basketball within the conference.
The ACC spring meetings began on May 11, 2023.
The meetings are being held at the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island.
Legal disputes involving Florida State and Clemson against the ACC have been settled before the meetings.
Discover the top 25 high schools in South Carolina for athletes according to a new study!
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
Alongside the discussion of expansion, there will be updates provided by the College Sports Commission (CSC), with its CEO, Bryan Seeley, in attendance. The CSC acts as an enforcement agency in college athletics, designed to keep institutions from circumventing NIL rules to compensate players.
In a recently released NIL report, the CSC has cleared over $75 million in NIL deals over the last two months, and more than $115 million in NIL deals since January.
One of the key storylines that will be discussed is an arbitration case between the CSC and Nebraska. Playfly, the multimedia rights partner for the Cornhuskers with a contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars, agreed to redirect upwards of $8 million to NIL support for the university. The CSC rejected that, and its rejection was affirmed when it won its arbitration case Monday evening.
Pair that with Duke's recent partnership with Amazon to stream three men's basketball games exclusively on the platform, which will also provide NIL opportunities for student athletes.
That deal is already facing a challenge from the Big Ten, which states it has the rights to the Blue Devils' game against Michigan, which is set to be one of the three games streamed on the service.
It will be a key talking point, and how, and if, it is implemented could change the landscape of collegiate athletics.
Liam Rooney covers Florida State athletics for the Tallahassee Democrat. Contact him via email at LRooney@gannett.com or on Twitter @__liamrooney.
This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: ACC spring meetings: Major College Football Playoff shift among topics