To follow up on my point before, if the super conferences shake out, this is what I have given a few different variables:
1) The Big 10 will only invite an AAU school (with the exception of ND)
2) The SEC will not expand into a state it already has a footprint in
3) With Texas A&M leaving and the legislature not able to stop them (should that come to pass), Baylor no longer has any protection.
If these assumptions were true, this is what I have:
Big 10:
Georgia Tech
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Maryland
Michigan
Michigan State
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska
Northwestern
Notre Dame
Ohio State
Penn State
Purdue
Wisconsin
The Big 10 gets into the Atlanta, Baltimore/DC, KC, St. Louis markets, and they get Notre Dame.
Pac 16:
Arizona
Arizona State
Cal
Colorado
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Oregon
Oregon State
Stanford
Texas
Texas Tech
UCLA
USC
Utah
Washington
Washington State
The Okie schools and Texas and Tech come along to round out at 16.
SEC:
Alabama
Arkansas
Auburn
Florida
Georgia
Kentucky
LSU
Mississippi
Mississippi State
North Carolina
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas A&M
Vanderbilt
Virginia Tech
West Virginia
The SEC adds four new states to it's footprint, and it doesn't tick off any existing member schools. Also, It still fits, geographically, because all four states added current border at least one current SEC member state.
Refugee (I have what I consider to be 15 safe additions):
Boston College
Clemson
Florida State
Iowa State
Kansas
Kansas State
Louisville
Miami
NC State
Pitt
Rutgers
Syracuse
TCU
UConn
Virgina
This is a combination any school leftover that is (A) a public institution, (B) has a stadium that holds at least 44,000 (that they don't lease from a pro sports team), or (C) currently lives in a BCS conference. I forgot to add TCU earlier because starting in 2012, they'll be in the Big East, so, yeah, they're in there.
The schools that would fight for the sixteenth spot:
Cincinnati
USF
BYU
Cincy has a dump of a stadium, and from what I understand, it would be very costly for them to make any renovations to it that would actually make it comparable to what the rest of the refugee schools have. It questions their ability to invest the funds necessary to compete at the super conference level.
USF doesn't even have their own stadium, but unlike Pitt (who uses Heinz Field), they don't really have any fans to fill said leased stadium. Last year, they averaged under 30K fans per game. That's not good.
BYU seems like a slam dunk choice with one major flaw; they are the only school west of the Central time zone. It's cool to have a conference in multiple time zones, but when you're the only member in the Mountain time zone, that refuses to compete on Sundays, it could be a hindrance regardless of how good you are. The logistics of playing games with BYU when you have a conference of teams mainly constituted east of the Mississippi would be a nightmare.
If I'm a betting man, Cincy would get the nod because they have a basketball team worth inviting to the table, and it would tip the scales in their favor.
I omitted Duke, Wake, and Baylor from the list. Neither Duke or Wake will ever invest the money necessary to compete in a super-conference. They don't have the alumni numbers, they don't have the attendance, and frankly, they don't have the infrastructure. Yes, they have basketball, but there will be a bunch of other really great basketball schools getting left behind when the Big East collapses, and they can just go hang out with them.
Baylor is just screwed because everyone hates Baylor, and no university president will willingly invite Ken Starr into their group. Period.
That gets you to 64, and I think it's a workable premise. I'm omitting Boise St., all of C-USA, etc. because, frankly, people assuming they'll get taken in the realignment is silly. Our assets and operating budgets put theirs to shame, and they simply don't have the infrastructure to be considered when you're trying to pick up the pieces.
I know that I'll get a lot of DNR responses from this, but the bottom line is that we're fine. I think all scenarios see us into the super-conferences.