Breaking News: Clemson Loses Lawsuit Against ACC due to……..

It appears as if the Clemson Tigers see the writing on the wall for the ACC.

With the approval of the expansion of the College Football Playoff last week to 14 teams, effective beginning in 2026, which will only further skew revenue disparity toward the Big Ten and SEC, Clemson has filed a lawsuit against the ACC formally challenging the conference’s Grant of Rights.

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Clemson announced its decision in a release, stating that the lawsuit was filed in Pickens County, S.C. Clemson is seeking confirmation of “the plain language found in the Grant of Rights agreements and the related media agreements between the ACC and ESPN” and that the agreements “when read together, plainly state that Clemson controls its media rights for games played if it is no longer a member of the ACC.”

In addition, Clemson is seeking a ruling regarding the “unenforceability of the severe penalty the ACC is seeking to impose upon exiting members.”

However, Clemson has made it clear that it remains a member of the ACC and has no formal plans to leave the conference.

In plain language, Clemson does not want to incur a $140 million exit fee by violating the league’s Grant of Rights if the program leaves the conference. If Clemson does choose to leave the ACC, it hopes to control its television rights while doing so.

Clemson is the second ACC school to sue the conference over the Grant of Rights, joining fellow football powerhouse Florida State.

As conference realignment continues to unfold, the futures of Clemson and Florida State in the ACC remain uncertain at best. If the ACC loses those schools, both of which have captured national championships in the past decade, the future of the conference will be in doubt.

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It’s been a tough few weeks for anyone who said new Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer would have a hard time adapting to recruiting in the South. That hasn’t come to fruition yet.

After the mass exodus of Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide players from last year’s roster, the former Washington coach brought in his own reinforcements from the transfer portal. He also secured 5-star wide receiver Ryan Williams in the ’24 class.

When spring practice ramped up in Tuscaloosa last week, DeBoer had more than 70 recruits on campus watching, according to Crimson Tide general manager Courtney Morgan. The Tide are already making waves in next year’s class with five pledges so far, all of whom are 4-star prospects.

Even though the Tide are only 13th on the 247Sports composite rankings as of now, they’re off to a strong start, even if they don’t have a high volume of commitments.

Since the calendar flipped to March, DeBoer picked up strong players from the Yellow Hammer State, including receiver Derick Smith. Defensive lineman Antonio Coleman—a high school teammate of Williams—joined the fray earlier in March, and Maryland athlete Zymear Smith also pulled the trigger.

Add them to 4-star athlete Myles Johnson and No. 91 overall running back Anthony Rogers, and DeBoer has a nice early haul.

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