SEC Football Realignment: Texas, Oklahoma changing the national landscape
By Ryan Kay
Here’s what a Power Four could look like
SEC
East
Georgia Bulldogs
Georgia Tech
Florida Gators
Tennessee Volunteers
Florida State Seminoles
Alabama Crimson Tide
Auburn Tigers
Miami Hurricanes
West
LSU Tigers
TCU Longhorns
Mississippi State Bulldogs
Ole Miss Rebels
Arkansas Razorbacks
Texas Longhorns
Oklahoma Sooners
Oklahoma State Cowboys
ACC
North
Pittsburgh Panthers
Louisville Cardinals
Kentucky Wildcats
Boston College Eagles
Syracuse Orange
NC State Wolfpack
Vanderbilt Commodores
Rutgers Scarlet Knights
South
Virginia Cavaliers
Virginia Tech Hokies
North Carolina Tar Heels
Duke Blue Devils
UCF Knights
Clemson Tigers
South Carolina Gamecocks
Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Big Ten
East
Maryland Terrapins
Penn State Nittany Lions
Michigan Wolverines
Indiana Hoosiers
Michigan State Spartans
Ohio State Buckeyes
Purdue Boilermakers
Notre Dame Fighting Irish
West
Wisconsin Badgers
Minnesota Golden Gophers
Iowa Hawkeyes
Illinois Fighting Illinii
Nebraska Cornhuskers
Northwestern Wildcats
Missouri Tigers
Texas A&M Aggies
Pac-12
North
Washington Huskies
Washington State Cougars
Oregon Ducks
Oregon State Beavers
Utah Utes
Iowa State Cyclones
Kansas State Wildcats
Colorado Buffaloes
South
California Golden Bears
Stanford Cardinal
USC Trojans
UCLA Bruins
Arizona State Sun Devils
Arizona Wildcats
Texas Tech Red Raiders
Baylor Bears
The above super conferences would make many fans and alums happy as without politics and restrictions on schools moving out of one power conference to another, it would be great to see the red tape be removed and to give the fans of college football what they want.