ACC Basketball Media Day used to be the land of the giants.
The Atlantic Coast Conference made an expected move on Monday when athletic directors of its 17 football-playing schools voted to expand to a nine-game league schedule in 2026.
The Atlantic Coast Conference on Tuesday announced two major changes to league policy, requiring pregame availability reports for selected sports and instituting a fine structure for postgame field- and court-storming.
The drum has been banging persistently since early December when 16 teams from the Southeastern Conference thundered into the SEC/ACC men's basketball Challenge and emerged with 14 victories.
The first 12-team College Football Playoff concluded Monday night, and, by Tuesday morning, the suggestion box was stuffed with ideas to improve the product.
The unrelenting dominance SEC men’s basketball programs have flexed on the ACC all season.
The Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball tipoff event unfolds Thursday in Charlotte, giving commissioner Jim Phillips an opportunity to hype his new and improved 18-team league.
A year ago, the combined brainpower and football forecasting faculty of the Atlantic Coast Conference media predicted that the University of Louisville football team would finish eighth in the league in its first season under Jeff Brohm.
The next blast of ACC expansion will not affect Louisville’s schedule during Rivalry Week.
The ACC has had football flashes, but it was built on basketball. Everybody knows that.