A method of scheduling opponents, such that the two teams play one game at each team’s home stadium. In college football, conferences such as the Big12, where a team does not play all the other teams each year, use a “home and away” schedule to play an opponent two years in a row and then rotate to another opponent. Teams also use this method to schedule non-conference opponents of roughly equal skill so that ticket revenue is split evenly. When scheduling teams of a lower calibre, the higher-rated team usually plays at home and provides a cash payout to the other team.


