College sports have always been chaotic, but the last 15 years have taken things to another level. It’s been a wild ride from conference realignment madness to exploding revenue gaps and crumbling power structures. TV rights wars and the new era of player revenue-sharing have left conferences scrambling to figure out who they are.
But while most conferences get swept up in the chaos, one decided to chart its course. On Monday, July 21, one of college football’s survivors made a bold move that changes everything about how they see themselves.
Why Did Tim Pernetti Scrap the AAC Name for “The American”?
The AAC is officially dead. Commissioner Tim Pernetti dropped the bombshell Monday that the American Athletic Conference is entirely ditching “Athletic” from its name. That change comes with the end of an acronym that has confused fans for years, thanks to its similarity to the ACC.
This rebrand comes just in time for the next year’s College Football 26 video game launch. Usually, a conference suddenly switching names and logos would create a nightmare for game developers. However, according to The Athletic, Pernetti ensured EA Sports knew what was coming.
“I think we’re gonna have to do a little hand-to-hand combat on it,” Pernetti joked. “Let’s not get into the acronym business. Let’s not be too similar to someone else.”
The confusion became clear during one of his first meetings with league presidents when he typed “AAC” into a search engine and landed on the Atlantic Coast Conference page instead.
The American Conference is announcing later today a renaming, retiring the names “American Athletic Conference” and “AAC” in place of “American Conference” or “American.”
The renaming comes with the creation of various rebranding concepts, including a new mascot: Soar the Eagle. pic.twitter.com/6zET0iPvGc
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) July 21, 2025
Pernetti wanted something that spoke for itself. A name that felt unmistakably American without needing explanation. So “The American” was born, and EA Sports quietly made the necessary adjustments. But this rebrand goes way deeper than just fixing video game graphics.
What Does “Built to Rise” Mean for The American’s Future?
When Pernetti took over in 2024, he walked into a league trying to find its identity. Under Michael Aresco, the conference had pushed the “Power 6” narrative hard, and they had the results to back it up. Seven of the first 10 College Football Playoff years featured the top Group of Five team from their conference. But then the exodus hit. UCF, Houston, Cincinnati, and SMUÂ all bolted for bigger conferences, leaving The American feeling like it was just trying to survive.
Pernetti’s rebrand flips that script completely. The new tagline, “Built to Rise,” conveys that this conference won’t be defined by rankings or history. Through private equity investments, new sponsorship deals, naming rights opportunities, and in-house marketing, Pernetti is constructing something different. The conference is even getting its own mascot for the first time.
🚨BREAKING NEWS🚨
RIP the AAC 😥@jessbensontv Show with @Conradicalness: https://t.co/1bVIzbH1K6 pic.twitter.com/iv5BOpbAvZ
— Grind City Media (@grindcitymedia) July 21, 2025
Meet Soar the Eagle. This isn’t just another mascot costume; it’s the first live-animated mascot for any college conference. Soar will appear everywhere, from classrooms to charity events, merchandise, and possibly even CFB26. The league wants this symbol of “service and grit” to become a marketing force that represents everything The American stands for.
The name change also tackles a considerable challenge for the conference: creating unity across a massive geographic footprint. Building a cohesive identity seemed impossible with teams scattered from Texas to Florida and up the East Coast, plus service academies Army and Navy, in the mix. “The American” gives all these diverse programs something to rally around. A new website will launch on media days in Charlotte to showcase this fresh identity.
If anyone is questioning whether The American can still compete on the field, the numbers speak volumes. Last season, their 15 teams earned eight bowl appearances, won the Bowl Challenge Cup, and posted a 6-2 postseason record. Only the Big Four power leagues matched that kind of bowl success.
The real test comes next: will gamers start choosing The American dynasty when CFB26 hits the shelves?
