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Future of cfb

4,674 Views | 40 Replies | Last: 2 days ago by Iowaggie
tamc91
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AG
It seems like they are going to start structuring NIL deals in a way that incentivizes staying put. I can't imagine that the big donors of many schools are going to be content on dropping a lot of money on an NIL deal then watching that guy hit the portal the next year. Most rich folks want to see a decent ROI or they won't be as willing to open their wallets.

It is sort of the wild west phase right now, but it seems there will need to be some stronger rules put in place soon, whether by the NCAA or by a group of large schools or colleges. I'm sure the coaches aren't at all happy with the way the NIL and Portal are impacting their rosters.
Little Rock Ag
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AG
All of these predictions are plausible, but the elephant in the room is why should the colleges and universities even maintain any type of connection to what is now full-blown professional football? The student-athlete concept in major college football is officially dead. I get that the academic institutions own the infrastructure, but it is absurd for them to continue to maintain control over professional football.

As such, I propose that each team form a nonprofit organization that is run by an elected board of trustees, and that the teams sign licensing agreements and leases with colleges and universities. All of these organizations will be collectively overseen by a central governing body that sets salary levels, signs broadcasting contracts, and maintains a competitive structure.
BMX Bandit
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No school is considering your proposal. It's not an elephant in the room, it's an elephant at a zoo in Pakistan. People are aware of it and talk about it, no one rally cares about it.

For all the handwringing and whining, schools are going to disconnect from the sports teams. There's too much money in it. Football is the "front porch" for lots of these schools.

Why should the teams not still be a part of the school? "Because players get paid" isn't really a valid reason for a breakup.

Very few are happy with the state of college football. Transfer portal, NIL mish mash & no enforcement body has made it the true Wild West. Something's got to change, and it will.

But let's be realistic on the future.
AggieSouth06
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Popularity (ratings, attendance) is as high as it's ever been despite NIL, transfer portal, realignment, etc. However, is there an inflection point where the facade breaks down so much that fans aren't really willing to delude themselves anymore? I still watch as much as I ever have, but I feel myself caring less and less. I could very much envision my viewing habits dropping off rapidly. But I'm n = 1 and maybe not representative. Also, maybe that's just called "getting older" idk.
Scotty Appleton
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LincolnBorglum79 said:

The 12 team tournament has seen the 5,6,7,8 seeds go 2-0 each while the 1-4 seeds are 0-4 as are the 9-12 seeds.

No road team won and no team with a bye won. Expand it immediately to a 16 team field with no byes and true seeding like basketball or baseball seeds.


The byes were overrated considering there were 10 days between the 1st & 2nd round games. I'd argue It actually gave the non-bye teams an advantage in that they got to remain sharp while getting plenty of rest between games.

If you keep the byes, the 1st and 2nd round games should be 1 week apart, same as FCS playoffs.
Iowaggie
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AG
I'll be interested to see what happens to the G5 schools.

The media money divide gets wider and wider and unlike the past, very good players aren't going to stick around on those teams so the talent gap will continue to increase between G5 and P4. So is dropping to FCS a realistic option, or perhaps P4 creates a Super division, and the G5 are their own division?

I don't think schools will drop football though. Not that it wouldn't be a sound decision for a handful of schools, but it is something that college presidents recover from as it's such a negative PR move, even if financially sound in a few cases.
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