Cal88 said:
Bearly Clad said:
I get the inclination to blame NIL or the portal but tbh they're just fringe reasons why this happened. Of course they're a factor because instead of the default being guys sticking around you need to prove your program to a guy and why they should stay. As fans can we be that upset? The program, as constructed, isn't proving itself as desirable and fans and donors see it; until there are some major changes major money won't start following in through donations and NIL. We can bemoan the Nuke and Elison money at other programs but they've proven that they have ROI on that engagement, the best we can do is keep our heads above water and, even then, just barely.
There are lots of deep pockets who are willing to give but staying away until they have excitement or are given a reason to invest in this . I mean think of it like a stock, this isn't like SMU who I would compare to GameStop a few years back with major elasticity and all it was requiring was enough people believing and investing in it. We, on the other hand, have so much inertia that it takes fundamental changes before any level of money flowing in (outside of massive, massive influxes) will excise the rot or paper over the blemishes. Either the administration decides to go all-in from the top down to be winners or we're losers and left out. It doesn't have to be this way but it's the reality of where we find ourselves in a mess if our own making
I think the real solution has to come from the ADs and university presidents of the several dozen programs that are going to be left behind to restore some sanity into the current free for all system that is far less regulated than the NFL - salary caps, transfer rules, redistribution schemes. It will probably require some political action.
It would take an act of Congress because everything that is happening now is due to the Supreme Court ruling establishing that college football is a huge $multibillion business and free market principles apply all enforced by our antitrust laws.
There are too many actors involved for a player's union and collective bargaining. It has to be a law passed by Congress to give the NCAA or someone else antitrust immunity to control "the market." This is one issue that in normal times you might see a lot of bipartisan support in Congress to do something. These are not normal times. Both Houses of Congress are controlled by Republicans pledged loyal to Trump. The GOP footprint correlates highly with the SEC and B1G
The big question is whether the SEC and B1G and the big money that supports them (and the GOP) are happy with the direction of college football? If they are then expect no action by Congress. Only if they become unhappy (players in SEC making too much?) will we see Congress act, in my opinion.