And one of those big-pay games a year is fine. But Penn State also played Temple and Akron. Michigan played EMU and WMU and also plays Delaware State. Michigan State played Montana State and CMU and has a game with WMU left. And that's just a few Big Ten teams for sampling. There's no reason to have three little boys on a team's schedule year in and year out. if you don't play little boys, you're playing a lot more home-and-home series, or 2-for-1, which reduces the number of home games you play, which costs your athletic department a lot of revenue. penn state can't bring in west virginia or maryland to play in happy valley every year. Penn State has eight home games. So does Michigan. MSU does too. I'm sure the majority of SEC teams do as well. Eight home games is great for revenue, I suppose, but it's ridiculous and punishes teams like Ohio State (loath as I am to give them credit for anything), USC, Florida/Florida State, Clemson/South Carolina, Georgia/Georgia Tech, and anyone else who actually tries to play intriguing games once in a while. I think it's stupid enough that ND is playing seven home games a year now with only four true road games. I don't think it's unreasonable to ask teams to at least play 7/5 schedules most years. They don't even have to make that extra road game all that tough (Texas played at UTEP recently, Miami's going to UCF the week after this one, IU has played games at MAC schools often).