Big Ten’s Breakaway Plan Is Our Last Shot

Look, we’ve been here before. 28-3. 37-0. The heartbreak that plays on loop in every Atlanta living room. But this time, it’s not just about the scoreboard. It’s about who holds the pen. The College Sports Commission? A paper tiger. Congress? Still drafting the same bill since 2022. Meanwhile, the Big Ten is waking up. Per CBS Sports, leaders are exploring full self-governance—meaning they’d write their own rules, enforce them, and answer to no one but their fans. That’s not rebellion. That’s responsibility.

And let’s be real—why should we trust the NCAA to protect our team’s legacy? They’ve been asleep for years. The NIL mess? A trainwreck. The flag football push? Fine. But they’re moving toward 2028 like it’s a formality. Meanwhile, Jamie Pollard, AD at Iowa State, is done. Not just frustrated—done. “Let them break away, go do it,” he said. That’s not a threat. That’s a wake-up call. We’ve seen what happens when power stays in the wrong hands. We’ve seen the collapse. Now we get to choose.

But here’s the kicker: it’s not just about the Big Ten. It’s about us. Our team. Our city. We’ve built this on grit, on Waffle House bets, on catching the 5:15 from the Beltline to the game. We don’t need a federal mandate to know what’s right. We know what a real season looks like. We know what a real coach looks like. We know what a real fight looks like. And if the Big Ten steps up—really steps up—then we’re not just fans. We’re co-owners.

Think about it. No more waiting on a committee that can’t agree on a single rule. No more watching Alabama or Texas A&M spend $71M on rosters while we’re stuck in the middle of a broken system. The data’s clear: the College Sports Commission is sputtering. Per CBS, enforcement is weak. The NAACP’s boycott campaign? That’s not just politics—it’s a sign the system’s failing. Our team doesn’t need to be caught in that. We need stability. We need authority. We need a home.

So what’s next? The Big Ten’s move isn’t a power grab. It’s a lifeline. If they go full self-governance, we get to shape the rules. We get to vote on who stays, who goes. We get to protect our culture. And if they don’t? Then we’re back to square one. Waiting. Hoping. Losing. But if they do? Then we’re not just fans. We’re builders.

So here’s my challenge: if the Big Ten takes the leap, let’s make it our fight. Not just a conference move. A city move. Let’s show them what Atlanta demands. Not just wins. But pride. Not just talent. But trust. The clock’s ticking. And we’re not waiting anymore.


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Marcus Tidwell

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