FSU is getting out, if something slows them temporarily then Clemson will adjust tactics and get out and then others will follow and FSU will regroup and try again. Teams in the ACC without a place to land will need to regroup and merge with another conference. Its not life or death, it is like a divorce or a rebellion. Its a matter of how much you want to spend to fight and how much dirty laundry do you want to have aired. The outcome is ineveitable so the ACC just needs to decide what is an equitable settlement and how much more money do they throw at fighting this and how do individuals save face so they can move on to their next job. Both parties survive a divorce, England survived the United States breaking away. The current ACC comissioner is fairly new and is not an ACC lifer. He will decide that he can blame this on prior leadership and spin a story that lands him another job. I expect he is currently thinking that this is not what he signed up for and how much easier life could be someplace else.I don't have any idea how it will shake out in terms of cost, but I don't see the rationale for the ACC settling. As I see it, their only option is to fight this to the death. If FSU gets out, no matter how much they pay, then the ACC is dead. At that point, exit fees are irrelevant. If FSU can get out, it will trigger a mass exodus from the conference. There are no schools for the ACC to add once FSU, Clemson, UNC, etc all take off. The ACC will fight like heck to keep FSU b/c it's a matter of life and death for the conference.