College football and the NCAA are officially in danger.

The commissioners of the Power 5 conferences met on Sunday to discuss the potential cancellation of football this fall, and it seems the NCAA’s Big Ten is fully prepared to postpone football until the spring (via ESPN):

Several sources have indicated to ESPN that Big Ten presidents, following a meeting on Saturday, are ready to pull the plug on its fall sports season, and they wanted to gauge if commissioners and university presidents and chancellors from the other Power 5 conferences — the ACC, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC — will fall in line with them.

Sources told ESPN that a vast majority of Big Ten presidents have indicated that they would vote to postpone football season, hopefully to the spring. A Big Ten official confirmed to ESPN that no official vote took place during Saturday’s meeting.

“It doesn’t look good,” one Power 5 athletic director said.

The Ivy League and Patriot League had previously canceled fall sports, but FBS leagues had yet to make a decision on the status of the fall season.

That all changed this weekend, when the Mid-American Conference (MAC) officially postponed the NCAA sports season on Saturday in the fall.

The Big Ten and SEC had originally moved for a conference-only schedule, but it seems there are reservations. According to ESPN, it is believed the Big Ten or Pac-12 will be the first of the Power 5 to announce a postponement:

Several sources have told ESPN over the past 48 hours that the postponement or cancellation of the football season seems inevitable. Many of those sources believed it ultimately will take a Power 5 conference to move things in that direction, and that either the Big Ten or Pac-12 would probably be the first league to do it.

Some school officials indicated they might be pressured into opting for postponement depending on whether the Big Ten and or Pac-12 choose that route.

An official decision might just be days away. The question is: which of the Power 5 will be the first to postpone?