Jim Phillips didn’t sound like a commissioner trying to sell a tidy future on Wednesday. He sounded like a man describing a league that has already been stretched coast to coast and is still figuring out what that means.
Speaking at ACC Kickoff at the Hilton Charlotte Uptown in downtown Charlotte, Phillips laid out a conference that, in his view, is in strong shape even as college sports keeps tilting toward a two-power structure built around the SEC and Big Ten.
"Today, I can confidently say the Atlantic Coast Conference enters the 2026-27 academic year from a position of tremendous strength," Philips said. "Our conference is thriving athletically, we're thriving academically, we're thriving financially and we are leading nationally during one of the most consequential periods in the history of college sports."
The ACC now has 17 teams in football, with California, Stanford and SMU joining from the West and Texas. Notre Dame pushes that number to 18 in the broader league picture, though it remains independent in football.
That expansion has already changed the map in a very real way. Virginia Tech is set to travel to Berkeley, Calif. to face California on Oct. 10 and to Dallas for SMU on Nov.
- The trips are brutal on the calendar, but they also reflect the financial logic behind the league’s reach.
The ACC can keep collecting carriage-fee revenue through its cable partnerships, even if only a small slice of viewers in California ever tune in.
That setup helps explain why the league can still point to big numbers. ACC schools receive $30 million per year, and the conference is projected to bring in more than $900 million in gross revenue, its seventh straight record year, even without a new television deal. The league remains tied to ESPN through the 2035-36 season, which keeps it from matching the kind of TV windfall the SEC and Big Ten have enjoyed.
Still, Phillips framed the ACC’s footprint as a strength, not a problem. The league’s own language from July 2024 called the additions part of a move to create "a true national conference that spans coast to coast."
On the field, the league had plenty to point to from the 2025-26 academic year. Fourteen ACC teams won conference championships, ACC programs claimed seven national titles and finished in the top two 15 times. Miami’s runner-up finish in college football was part of that haul.
The other major change Phillips addressed was the NCAA’s new five-in-five eligibility rule, which wipes away much of the old redshirt debate by shifting the focus to age. That simplicity comes with a catch, though, because it can affect players whose college careers were shaped under the previous system.
Virginia Tech cornerback Joshua Clarke is one example. He missed the entire 2025 season with a torn ACL. Because he redshirted his freshman year after playing two games, he would end up with only three full years of collegiate football under the new clock.
Phillips acknowledged both sides of the rule change, noting that it makes the system easier to understand while also creating complications for players who have already spent most of their careers under the old rules.
The biggest competitive wrinkle came with the ACC’s revamped tiebreaker for the football championship game. Winning percentage still comes first, and head-to-head results remain the next separator.
After that, though, the league will turn to the Team Success Ranking from SportSource Analytics. If that still doesn’t settle it, body of work becomes the final measure.
That matters because the ACC, like the other Power Four leagues, now gets one automatic qualifying bid into the 12-team College Football Playoff. Phillips said the league wants a system that rewards teams that earn their way in.
"We strongly support a model that provides greater access and ensures [that] every program willing to invest, compete and earn its way into the [College Football] Playoff has a legitimate path to play for a national championship," Phillips said.
For Virginia Tech, the title-game discussion is more theoretical than immediate. The Hokies haven’t reached the ACC championship game since 2016 and haven’t won it since 2010. But the new setup still matters if they ever push back into that conversation.
The season itself gets rolling on Aug. 29, when UNC plays TCU at noon in Dublin, Ireland, and Virginia hosts NC State at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville. Virginia Tech opens a week later, hosting VMI on Saturday, Sept. 5 at 7:30 p.m.
ET on ACC Network. It will be the first meeting between the Hokies and VMI since the 1984 season.
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