Paul Finebaum, the host of the SEC Network, has never been shy about sharing his opinion on college athletics.

With some of the seismic changes taking place in the wake of Texas and Oklahoma deciding to join the SEC, the ACC, Big Ten and Pac-12 have discussed forming an alliance.

Just don’t try to tell Finebaum that the alliance will be able to challenge the SEC at all. During an appearance on “McElroy and Cubelic in the Morning” on WJOX on Monday morning, Finebaum ripped the proposed alliance, saying there’s no reason to think it will have any impact on the SEC:

“I think it’s a desperate move that signifies absolutely zero,” he said. “What difference does it make if the ACC, the Big Ten, the Pac-12 and anyone else schedule games? That already happens. It doesn’t affect the most important aspect of the Texas-Oklahoma move. The SEC has simply left everyone else in the dust and has the first true super-conference and the biggest brands and the best value in college football. You can get all the games you want between Southern Cal and North Carolina and Clemson and Michigan, and so what? We already have these types of games. We’re two-and-a-half weeks away from Clemson-Georgia, Ohio State-Oregon, Michigan-Washington — these games are already on the schedule.

“And, once the 12-team Playoff shows up, whenever that is, it’s going to make all this stuff even more obsolete. If you’re sitting there in all these other leagues, you’ve looked at the map, you’ve tried to do the math. There’s simply no move. The Big 12 doesn’t have a move. The ACC, short of Notre Dame changing its mind, doesn’t have a move. And the Big Ten certainly doesn’t have a move. You meet with your colleagues, you come up with contingency plans. You try to do anything you can to blame one person for every single thing that has happened. You try to blow up a 12-team Playoff because of one person, and that one person is Greg Sankey.

“Quite frankly, all Greg Sankey did was take a phone call. That’s all he did. He didn’t conspire. He didn’t try to manipulate the system. He played within the rules of the College Football Playoff. He met with the other 3 gentlemen on the committee, and he gets all the blame for everything. Everyone also wants to blame ESPN and say let’s open it up to FOX in 4 or 5 years, and they accomplished nothing. … This drives me crazy. The Pac-12 needs the 12-team Playoff more than anyone else. The Big Ten could use it. The ACC has done OK with Clemson, and the SEC is assured a spot every year, so what do they care?”

Will this possible alliance actually happen? If so, what will college football look like in 4-5 years? We’ll find out soon enough, it seems.