Friday, July 3, 2026

College Football’s New Reality: Miles Traveled Is Now a Key Metric

  • Conference realignment is greatly increasing the distances that some teams will travel this year.
  • The football-driven changes continue to place pressure on Olympics sports programs.
Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

College football teams are usually measured based on their win-loss totals. There are all sorts of additional metrics, such as strength of schedule, yards gained and allowed, and points scored. You can even get granular with analytics that incorporate matchup and tracking data.

But one of the most meaningful statistics of this very different 2024 season will be miles traveled. 

Ongoing upheaval across this part of the industry—led by conference realignment, the arrival of true coast-to-coast entities in that reshuffling, and the expansion of the College Football Playoff—is greatly increasing the distance that many teams will travel.

UCLA, now part of a remade Big Ten Conference that stretches from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean, leads the way with a schedule that will involve more than 11,000 miles of travel, per Kayak—fueled by away games at Hawaii, LSU, Penn State, Rutgers, Nebraska, and Washington. 

But the Bruins are hardly alone in this new reality of college football, as other newly realigned schools such as Cal, Stanford, and the aforementioned Huskies are poised for similarly hefty travel demands this fall. A remade ACC, another conference now stretching across the entire continental U.S., is also prompting meteoric increases in travel for some of its incumbent schools, such as N.C. State and Georgia Tech, compared to last year.

“That’s part of the game. If you want to play big-time ball, you’re going to have to travel and go to new stadiums and hostile environments,” Bruins coach DeShaun Foster (above) said at the team’s recent Big Ten media days. “I think we’re looking forward to that.”

Notably, Foster, a former star Bruins player who went on to play professionally for six years, also said of the team’s schedule, “In the NFL, you travel, so it’s the same thing”—further highlighting the increasingly blurred lines between college and pro football. 

What About Other Sports?

As the realignment wave has heightened, athletes and coaches in Olympic and non-revenue sports have consistently sounded the alarm about the potential impacts of the new-look conferences on their programs. Historic levels of change in college sports’ revenue model only add to those pressures. 

Already, even powerhouse schools such as Ohio State are signaling a potential of reduced scholarships and altered structures for programs outside of football and men’s basketball.

“We’ll still have scholarships, we’ll still have programs,” Ohio State president Ted Carter told The Columbus Dispatch. “Some of those sports may start to look and act a little bit more like a club sport, but yet compete at the Division I level and still travel.”

Other Olympic sports programs, such as beach volleyball at USC, were orphaned altogether, providing opportunity for upstarts such as the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Pair of Merging D-II Schools Sue Conference That Kicked One Out

Ursuline College’s athletic recruiting and scheduling are being drastically impacted. 
Exclusive

ESPN Nears Mike Garafolo Deal As It Goes All In on NFL Reporters

ESPN has a deep bench of NFL reporters and personalities.

Brendan Sorsby Embraces 650-Day Wait for Chance at NFL Roster

The quarterback is a man without a home this fall.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

7/3/26 – USMNT Round of 16 Ticket Frenzy, NBA Tests New Free Throw Rule, Ovechkin Returns, Country Roads Takes Over

0:00

Featured Today

ATLANTA, GA - September 05: Georgia Lottery fireworks after the game against the Seattle Mariners at Truist Park on Friday, September 5, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Inside the Spectacle and Science of MLB Fireworks

Postgame fireworks are lighting up baseball for America250.
Kansas City Chiefs
July 1, 2026

NFL Teams Push to Turn Futbol Fans Into Football Devotees

NFL teams are courting international soccer fans during their World Cup visits.
June 26, 2026

What We Saw Traveling the U.S. for the World Cup Group Stage

The knockout stage begins Sunday.
June 26, 2026

In an Era of $1,000 Tickets, $10 Watch Parties Bring Fans Together

Stadium watch parties now rival home-game experiences.
June 25, 2026

Italian Americans Have Severe World Cup FOMO

Bars and restaurants in Boston, Philly, and beyond are missing the Azzurri.

College Sports Roster Spending Soars Beyond $20.5M Rev-Share Cap

The $20.5 million rev-share cap was a new floor for roster costs.
Nov 22, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions running back Kaytron Allen (13) runs the ball into the end zone for a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Beaver Stadium.
June 25, 2026

Court Hands NCAA, Conferences Win in Fight Over NIL Enforcement

Schools are still going above the revenue-sharing cap.
June 26, 2026

West Virginia AD: McAfee’s Value to School ‘Maybe Eight Figures’

The sports media star played at West Virginia nearly two decades ago.
Sponsored

Josh Childress: Why Now Is the Time for NBA Expansion

Josh Childress on why he invested in the Portland Thorns, the case for NBA expansion, and donating to Stanford NIL.
June 25, 2026

The Clippers Have Innovated the NCAA Draft-and-Stash

No. 57 pick Narcisse Ngoy will still play for Auburn this season.
Mar 16, 2026; Dayton, OH, USA; Detailed view of the “NCAA” logo during the Howard Bison a practice session ahead of the first four of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at University of Dayton Arena.
June 24, 2026

Players Sue NCAA Over New Five-Year Eligibility Model

The players are suing after being excluded from the new policy.
June 23, 2026

NCAA Approves New ‘Age-Based’ Eligibility Rule

Two attorneys are preparing lawsuits on behalf of at least 50 players.
Mar 21, 2026; Storrs, CT, USA; Iowa State Cyclones guard Jada Williams (8) returns then ball against the Syracuse Orange in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion.
June 23, 2026

Women’s Basketball Players Blast College Sports Bill

“Where we disagree is—Congress shouldn’t be deciding who makes those rules.”