I saw an interesting idea recently about SEC divisions and scheduling that I think has a lot of merit and is worth considering. Saban's long pushed for the SEC to expand to a 9-game conference schedule to improve SOS and so that everyone plays each other more often instead of it being 5 or 6 years between getting to play some teams. This idea solves that.
First, the SEC would add two teams for a total of 16 and then divide the conference into 4 divisions based on a mixture of geography and balancing out the traditional powers so that no division would be particularly weaker or stronger than the others.
Each team would annually play the other 3 teams in its division, a traditional rival from each of the other 3 divisions, and 1 team, on a rotating basis, from each of the other 3 divisions. The games against rotating cross-divisional schools would be for only a year at a time instead of a two year home & away, but this would allow each school to face every other school at least once every 3 years.
Each program would be required to play at least 1 Power 5 OOC game every year. If they played 1 P5 team and 1 Group of 5 team, or 2 P5 teams then they'd be allowed to schedule a cupcake for homecoming or as a tuneup game.
The only issue I see is how you would determine which 2 teams went to the SECCG. You can't have 4 teams playing in an SECCG semifinal, but simply taking the two schools with the best conference records should be fine (along with all the tie breakers to determine which two got in in case of ties). Thoughts?