Saw an article a while back that detailed a scheduling solution for the mess that is the SEC schedule. Coaches, players and fans alike have been grumbling about not playing other schools often enough, and about scheduling inequities too. Right now UGA and A&M supposedly play in the same conference even though it will take like 13 years for the Dawgs to get to College Station. That's dumb. LSU just played at Vanderbilt for the first time in over a decade, and when UGA came to LSU last year that was a blue moon also.
I think it's an interesting idea that fixes those problems as well as possible without going to a 9-conference game schedule, which the SEC seems determined to avoid, and keeps all the coveted rivalries intact.
Basically every team gets 3 permanent opponents and the other 10 conference teams are split into 5 teams that you play on even years and 5 teams you play on odd years. So if you get a 4 year degree from a university, you'll have been everywhere and played everyone the SEC has to offer.
It would look something like this:


So UGA and AU get to play every year, UT and Bama play every year, which seems like the main things member schools would want to protect. Probably not everybody would be happy--seems to be some discussion that Arkansas would like to keep LSU, UK would rather play UT every year than MSU, etc. It seems at this point A&M would want to keep LSU (as listed in the picture) and they would probably get preference. You'd have sacrifices obviously, such as if LSU and A&M are locked, then as an LSU fan I'd hate to lose Ole Miss, even if the game doesn't mean what it did in the 50's and 60's. That leaves one spot, you can see Alabama is in it now, which is good, but it means the Florida game would have to go. Personally I'd rather be able to play both of those schools every year, and frankly I'd kinda miss the Auburn game too, but something like this would definitely work for me. I'd trade only getting to play UF/AU every other year if it meant playing UGA/UT/etc. 2 out of 4 years.
There's probably small things that could be worked out--like if I were LSU I'd probably try to separate Florida and Georgia to separate years instead of the same year for sos purposes--but it's nothing that couldn't be ironed out, and to me the benefits would outweigh any losses.
What do you think?