As an alumni of one of the more isolated D1 programs (Montana), the thought of some of the travel involved in these new coast-to-coast conferences is absurd. It's one thing for the football programs, who will only have to travel a handful of times a year and be profitable in doing so, but the other sports? There will be ramifications. If I were a student-athlete of a non-revenue sport I really don't think Cal's schedule would hold much appeal, and that's as someone who loves traveling.
The difference between a couple hours of travel and half a day of travel is enormous, and that's going to be the new normal up and down those athletic programs. I'd have to imagine some student-athletes aren't going to be able to handle it without missing a beat. For academically-driven schools, this isn't the kind of thing that's going to do great things for student-athlete grades.
Just glancing over the women's soccer schedule and the travel aspect really plays out there. The non-conference schedule is pretty standard. Hosting a tournament with a mix of programs (Iowa, Oregon State, & Colorado College), your Washington States, Wyomings, Fresno States, one random midwestern program visiting, and hosting one of the smaller NAIA Montana schools. Furthest distance traveled by the Griz there is @ Air Force, a little less than 1,000 by road. Furthest distance traveled by anyone on that schedule is IU Indianapolis (formerly IUPUI) flying ~1,700 miles for one game. Now picture Cal traveling to Miami for a single conference game in a non-revenue sport. That's 3,000+ miles and at least half a week by bus, so that's a definite flight. Nearest airport to Berkeley is Oakland, which doesn't have any direct flights to Miami so you're chartering a plane 2,600 miles each way. That's a hell of a lot more expensive than taking the bus to Pullman. Better hope the football money is as plentiful as hoped because it will need to be able to float the non-revenue sports on an entirely new level than before.
As someone who grew up a Penn State fan in Pittsburgh and was never able to convince his parents to make the drive to State College for a game, I've always dreamed of seeing Penn State play in the Rose Bowl. A regular season conference game isn't the way I pictured it happening, but it's hard for me to pretend that I'm not excited about Penn State being brought some 2,500+ miles to my backyard. That's a hell of a lot easier to do in a market like Los Angeles than it'll be in State College or Iowa City or any of those cities chosen because of being in the geographical middle of a state like pretty much every long-term Big Ten member is.