Okay..
SEC (Currently 13 teams):
Auburn
Arkansas
Tennessee
Florida
Georgia
A&M
Vandy
Mississippi State
LSU
Ole Miss
Alabama
Kentucky
So. Car
PAC-X (16 teams)
Texas
OU
OK State
Texas Tech
USC
Oregon
UCLA
Stanford
Arizona
Arizona State
Cal
Colorado
Oregon State
Washington
Washington State
Utah
Big Ten Plus (Currently 12)
Ohio State
Michigan
Purdue
Wisconsin
Northwestern
Iowa
Nebraska
Michigan State
Illinois
Indiana
Penn State
Minnesota
ACC (Currently 12/14):
Miami
FSU
Duke
Wake Forest
North Carolina
Clemson
NC State
Virginia
Va Tech
Maryland
Boston College
Georgia Tech
And adding
Syracuse
Pitt
Assuming the 64-team super conference alignment is the goal, you've got 55 of the spots taken as things currently stand.
Teams currently on the outside looking in:
Baylor, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State from the former Big 12
Cincinnati, UConn, Marquette, Louisville, Georgetown, DePaul, Providence, Rutgers, St. John, Seton Hall, USF, West Virginia, Villanova, Georgetown from the eroding Big East.
Notre Dame, Army, Navy from the Independents
The entire WAC
The entire Mountain West (including Boise, Air Force, Colorado State, Wyoming and UNLV)
The entire Conference USA (including Southern Miss, Memphis, Marshall, UAB, UCF)
PAC 12 is full up.
Big Ten Plus can only take four and of the ones left, you'd have to think Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri and Notre Dame would be the naturals.
SEC would have three to give. As the WVU rumor burns, that means the SEC would likely raid other conferences leaving them to scramble. Geographically Clemson makes the most sense because it's closer to most SEC schools than South Carolina. And FSU is a natural fit. Then Va. Tech? I don't want them (any of them) but the SEC won't be left hanging. Would we take Louisville, Memphis and South Florida instead? Would the SEC throw Ole Miss and Vandy out and replace them with better schools? I'd love to trade Ole Miss for Southern Miss, for instance. Would improve the league. Would we try to sneak in and steal Notre Dame from the Big 10?
ACC has two left. UConn and Rutgers seem the most likely to me. Bust New York market wide open.
At the end of the day Baylor seems destined to be adrift with no home. West Virginia, now that the SEC has spurned them, also seems destined to float off into the netherlands.
The more I look at this, the more it seems like a bad, bad deal. What happens to a team like Southern Miss? Or Boise State? They now wake up every August knowing that they have absolutely zero chance of winning a national title? Their revenues will shrink. Part of what (used to) make college football great was that one of those smaller teams really could come out of nowhere and win their way into the polls and have a shot -- albeit remote.
What becomes of teams like South Alabama now trying to transition to D1? What's the fucking point? Why bother?
I say boo to this whole deal.
(For the record, super conference won't work in basketball, but that's another story for another day).