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No more divisions in 2023

glassmanJ

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Jan 26, 2007
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    David M. HaleESPN Staff Writer
The ACC became the latest conference to scrap divisions in favor of a new scheduling format Tuesday, making 2022 the final year of the Atlantic and Coastal divisions.

Starting in 2023, the league announced it will move to a 3-5-5 format, in which each team has three permanent rivalry games played annually, with the other 10 opponents rotating on an every-other-year basis.

"The future ACC football scheduling model provides significant enhancements for our schools and conference, with the most important being our student-athletes having the opportunity to play every school both home and away over a four-year period," ACC commissioner Jim Phillips said in a statement. "We appreciate the thoughtful discussions within our membership, including the head football coaches and athletic directors. In the end, it was clear this model is in the best interest of our student-athletes, programs and fans, at this time."

The plans for a shift back to a single-division format gained steam during the league's spring meetings in May, with the ACC hoping to improve its TV inventory of marquee games and set up a league championship game that would include its two best teams annually. Interestingly, the new format would not have altered the teams playing in the ACC title game in seven of the past eight years.

ACC's Permanent Rivalries In 2023​

Boston College: Miami, Pitt, Syracuse
Clemson: FSU, Georgia Tech, NC State
Duke: UNC, NC State, Wake Forest
Florida State: Clemson, Miami, Syracuse
Georgia Tech: Clemson, Louisville, Wake Forest
Louisville: Georgia Tech, Miami, Virginia
Miami: BC, FSU, Louisville
North Carolina: Duke, NC State, Virginia
NC State: Clemson, Duke, UNC
Pitt: BC, Syracuse, Virginia Tech
Syracuse: BC, FSU, Pitt
Virginia: Louisville, UNC, Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech: Pitt, Virginia, Wake Forest
Wake Forest: Duke, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech


The ACC got a taste of the single-division system in 2020, when Notre Dame football joined the conference on a one-year basis due to COVID-19 restrictions. With 15 members, the ACC scrapped divisions, and the season culminated with a Clemson-Notre Dame matchup in the league's title game, with both teams ultimately making it to the College Football Playoff.

The ACC is now the fifth FBS league to scrap divisions. The Big 12 has operated without divisions since 2011 after the departures of Nebraska, Missouri and Texas A&M in realignment. The American did away with the divisional format last year, when UConn departed for independent status. The Pac-12 and Mountain West have also voted to eliminate divisions for 2023. The SEC expects to follow suit but remains in discussions over the best format.

The new scheduling format preserves many of the league's traditional rivalries, with Clemson-FSU, FSU-Miami, NC State-UNC and Virginia-Virginia Tech still on the books annually. But the shake-up does disrupt some other notable rivalries, including NC State and Wake Forest, who had played every year since 1910, the league's longest-running uninterrupted rivalry.

Under the new scheduling plan, Pitt would have among the easiest slates. Its permanent rivals are Boston College, Syracuse and Virginia Tech, who have combined to win just 38% of their Power 5 games during the playoff era.

Georgia Tech, on the other hand, will endure the toughest schedule, with its permanent rivals being Clemson, Louisville and Wake Forest (combined 60% wins in the playoff era).
 
I’ll miss playing FSU -that had the makings of a good rivalry game, but they did at least give Louisville Miami to make up for it. I’m indifferent to Georgia Tech and feel very meh regarding UVA, but it’s not terrible.
 
G Tech and Virginia, really? Zzzzzzz. Would much prefer V Tech, Pitt, FSU, somebody with a name that people have actually heard of.

Glad to see Miami though - there's a history going back to Howard and the games are fun/competitive. Good for recruiting FL too.
 
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I think GA Tech was obvious as rivalry goes back before metro conference i think. FSU and Miami are our biggest games so one of the two. UVA is jsut a throw in but GT made sense for the history.
 
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G Tech and Virginia, really? Zzzzzzz. Would much prefer V Tech, Pitt, FSU, somebody with a name that people have actually heard of.

Glad to see Miami though - there's a history going back to Howard and the games are fun/competitive. Good for recruiting FL too.
They probably aren't excited about playing us, either. It beats playing UCONN and Rutgers.
 
Lets talk about who got the best draw of easiest three:

My vote: Wake:

got Duke, Gtech, & Vtech. 2 softies out of 3.
Next: Pitt: got BC, Cuse, & Vtech. 2 softies for them too.

Worst hardest draw:

UVA: got Cards, UNC, & Vtech
Vtech: got Pitt, UVA, & WF.

Looks like the Virginia schools got 'Wahoosed' and Wake skates away with the easiest of all perm schedules. Go figure, the ACC Elites must really, really have it in for Wake and the state of Virginia. o_O :rolleyes:;)

What do you all think?
 
Love love love the new format. Love being able to see every team come through Louisville every 4 years.

And don’t forget that each team also gets to either host or visit Notre Dame approximately every three years. While the ND game won’t count in the ACC standings, it definitely makes those 5 teams’ schedule significantly tougher.
 
They probably aren't excited about playing us, either. It beats playing UCONN and Rutgers.

My expectation is that at some point, and soon, we become "Louisville" again and the play on the field reflects what Louisville has been since the late 90's (and a few of Howard's years) - an exciting, blue collar program that scores a lot of points, is exciting to watch, with defensive playmakers on the other side of the ball, a program that wins most of its games and give us a puncher's chance to beat anyone on any given Saturday. Everyone was excited to play us recently and it wasn't that long ago.

You are definitely right about the second part.
 
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