Carlyle Holiday has the right idea here. First, the antitrust talk as it pertains to the BCS is mostly saber rattling. Second, if there were four superconferences and they left the NCAA to form their own organization, there really isn't anything the rest of the schools could do about it. I understand why you guys think there will be all these lawsuits, because people WILL be upset. But, contrary to popular belief, being upset is not, in and of itself, grounds for a lawsuit. I don't see any grounds on which a school or schools could sue a superconference structure seeking inclusion and win. Maybe they could recover some modest amount of money under a breach of contract theory, but they'd have to prove damages and (1) that would be harder than you think and (2) the superconference structure would be printing it's own money and probably wouldn't be all that bothered by it, anyway.