You keep saying the GOR is rock solid and I wouldn’t disagree if we are talking one to three schools as the others would rally and enforce.
The question is how many schools does it take leaving to invalidate it?
Or how many schools does it take to vote it out?
When we are talking massive amounts of money there are moves that can be made if there are outs in the contract.
Example if it takes 7 schools leaving to invalidate the GOR because the league ceases to exist by definition then it’s plausible they could potentially pull it off.
The FSU has stated his school will be working from a 30 million dollar a year deficit to SEC schools. They gonna try everything they can to kill that bitch.
The SEC absolutely takes that call but they answer will be just let us know when you get out of the GOR. It won’t be the SEC’s mess just like OU and UT GORs weren’t their mess.
I keep saying that it is because it is. I don't get why you guys keep acting like it's some minor problem or contract that can easily be broken. It's rock fucking solid. I've stated why here many times, so I am not going to do it again. But the GOR is doing exactly what it was designed to do ... arguing to a court that you should be able to violate it because it is doing exactly what it was designed to do will get you laughed out of court.
I don't know the exact answer to this but have read at least 2 articles that seem to indicate there isn't a provision in it for dissolution of the conference. That said, it would seem to me that it would take at least a majority, so you are looking at 8 ... there are 15 signatories to the GOR.
So, assuming that you could dissolve the league that would dissolve the GOR, who are the 8?
Not sure what ND would do, as they aren't going to go to a conference.
Ones that would likely want to go: UNC, FSU, Clemson. Those are the only 3 that would likely have landing spots.
No one else in the ACC has a landing spot anywhere else where they can make more money. There aren't 4 others that will want to leave. The SEC and the B1G don't want UVA, VaTech, NCSU, Miami or name the 5th.
As for the SEC, I don't understand why you guys think they want to continue to expand. They have the perfect fit right now. Tons of money, two new blue bloods, a great new contract, great new scheduling, and expanded CFP. It will take years for them to get all this pulled together and the last thing they want to do is deal with bringing in 2 more teams (or 4 or 6), especially when it is questionable that those teams bring that much to the table from a financial perspective.
Keep in mind, there is no advantage to most of the SEC teams to bring in more teams that will likely beat them ... why would the Miss teams, Arky, Auburn, USCjr, Vandy want more really good teams meaning there would be less of a chance they could have a winning record and/or get into the CFP. Everyone keeps reading these "super-conference" articles that never articulate why you would want a super-conference. At some point, all the schools say, timeout, we don't need to bring in 4 or 6 more schools ... we like the new schedule, we like the fact that 4 or 5 of 16 will get into the CFP, we like that most of us will go bowling. If we bring in more teams, 2 of whom are better than us, we just get further behind.
Quit thinking that expansion is always a good thing, and is always going to happen. Going to 16 was a no-brainer for the SEC. Going any further makes no sense.