Nothing, but if you’re recruit 119 and 120 at Alabama, what good does that do when you literally never seen the field and probably don’t even dress or travel for gamesHonestly, what’s to stop a school from recruiting 120 players and having boosters pay the expenses for the 86-120 who don’t get “scholarships”?
I floated the idea of splitting college football in tiers with a promotion and relegation system, so theoretically, every team has a reasonable chance at a winning record or bowl game. I was soundly chastised by the wisdom of this board (with more than a little bias against soccer leagues). I even left in a mechanism to maintain key rivalries. I still think it would work well, but the biggest hurdle is tv contracts. Anyway, the current arrangement is a nice farm system for the NFL and will lead to many universities abandoning football.We're never, ever going to play for anything worth anything again, are we?
Nope. The 85 scholarship limit was a massive cause of SOME parity over the last several decades.We're never, ever going to play for anything worth anything again, are we?
It’s still 85 scholarships, just theoretically could sign 50 new players in every class while cutting all the underperformersNope. The 85 scholarship limit was a massive cause of SOME parity over the last several decades.
We fooked.
Those who live in glass houses...Without the 25 counter rule Nebraska will be able to recruit enough to make up for the half of their team that transfers out every year.
Yeah I mean, the rules would be great, but it makes no difference if they aren’t going to investigate and enforce them against all programs, including the blue bloods.Feels like this is the NCAA screaming in the forest “I’m still here!”
Could also be an acknowledgment of sorts that they know the big schools are going to ditch the NCAA soon, and they’re establishing some parameters for everybody else so they can get used to following them.Yeah I mean, the rules would be great, but it makes no difference if they aren’t going to investigate and enforce them against all programs, including the blue bloods.
Feels like this is the NCAA screaming in the forest “I’m still here!”
Yeah I mean, the rules would be great, but it makes no difference if they aren’t going to investigate and enforce them against all programs, including the blue bloods.
They will absolutely enforce these rules. Northeast Nevada State better look out because they are going to get hammered.It's comical to think that they're actually going to enforce these rules
Meh, the NCAA is the named party in the SCOTUS decisions. I don’t think high schools are under the same classification since there’s no national body brokering multi-billion dollar media deals like the NCAA.Does amateurism still exist after NIL?
Because what came down from DC seems to say that high schools and their boosters can do exactly what NCAA schools and their boosters are doing.
Much like the Olympics had a brief period where the pros were allowed to compete and many did, I think this too will subside after the initial fervor dies down. It feels to me like the NCAA is already starting to position itself as a governing body for those schools who decide to abide by their rules and will let the others go do their own thing. Where I think it will get interesting is for the other sports. Football rules, but it will be tough for some schools to basically discard their basketball, baseball, lacrosse, hockey, swimming, wrestling, whatever programs in order to play for football glory and lots and lots of money. Some will, no doubt. I think schools like Michigan and Oregon (for example) that have very strong non-football programs will think twice about ditching the NCAA. We are in for some interesting times.Does amateurism still exist after NIL?
Because what came down from DC seems to say that high schools and their boosters can do exactly what NCAA schools and their boosters are doing.
I'm sure this would make @hawg1 go six to midnight, but I truly believe the more the SEC isolates itself from the rest of the field, the worse off they are going to be.
I just don't see Ohio State and Michigan getting on their knees for the SEC like A&M, OU and UT have done. I don't see USC doing it either, tbh, but USC is in a ****ty conference situation, so maybe they would be desperate. I could definitely see Oregon begging to join because they're a historically **** program that is only relevant because of PK and Nike. The Florida schools and Clemson would all probably bail on the ACC in a heartbeat if they could afford to break their deal with the conference. Probably North Carolina too.Be worse for everyone else, just add to the money the SEC makes.
We can see the separation of the highest dollar programs in college football into their own division or more likely own governing body happening sooner than later. The SEC already has more of those eventual big dollar programs than any other conference and has already stripped four teams from the B12.
This may simply be a part of a plan by the SEC to build this eventual organization around their leadership and influence.
If their next steps are to add USC and Oregon from the PAC12, Clemson, Miami, and Free Shoes U from the ACC, 4-6 from the B1G, how far are they at that point from dominating the sport and the media money that comes with it.
At that point you would have some other programs begging them for an invite but the path will already be set.
If the goal is to retain status quo, then I agree. I have come to the conclusion that status quo is no longer a viable option for CU. Let USC and Oregon, OSU, Penn St, and whoever else fancies themselves college football royalty go form their own quasi-pro league. The rest of us will (hopefully) be left with something that resembles what we all liked about college athletics. That’s my hope, anyway. I feel like that’s definitely the road we are all on at the moment.Most of the Pac 12 and ACC, along with the entire Big 12, and two thirds of the B1G need Ohio State and Michigan to stay out of the SEC
Take that money that is currently split among five P5 conferences and channel 60% or more into the super conference and you are easily talking about $60 million a year or more per team. They may even be looking to make it to $100 million per team.I just don't see Ohio State and Michigan getting on their knees for the SEC like A&M, OU and UT have done. I don't see USC doing it either, tbh, but USC is in a ****ty conference situation, so maybe they would be desperate. I could definitely see Oregon begging to join because they're a historically **** program that is only relevant because of PK and Nike. The Florida schools and Clemson would all probably bail on the ACC in a heartbeat if they could afford to break their deal with the conference. Probably North Carolina too.
Most of the Pac 12 and ACC, along with the entire Big 12, and two thirds of the B1G need Ohio State and Michigan to stay out of the SEC