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Started By
Message
Writer doesn't want anything reformed in college football.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 5:50 pm
Posted on 3/25/25 at 5:50 pm
This dude writes for the Federalist, a conservative online publication. I enjoy reading its stuff but sometimes, people who write about politics decided to stray into other areas such as sports in this case.
Of course, he says almost nothing about the transfer portal nor the abuse of the NIL system. Nothing about how courts are now erasing limits on eligibility or how many years athletes participate in college sports. yeesh.
The Federalist website
quote:
I lived it as a college football player myself, lungs burning, ankles twisted, and bones broken. But I was provided a scholarship and a ticket to a bigger and better life. For millions, it’s been the same: a degree, a way out, and potentially even a shot at Olympic gold. American Olympians, and American women especially, dominate athletics globally because of our great and unparalleled American intercollegiate athletics system. That’s not hype, it’s fact.
But today, the lifeline of college sports is on life support. What started as an amateur dream is now a multibillion-dollar beast, and the big dogs — the SEC, Big Ten, and to a lesser extent the Big 12 and the ACC, the “Autonomy Four” — are ready to rip it apart. They’ll tell you it’s about fairness for athletes and “stabilization” of the system. Don’t buy it. It’s a heist, and the victims are the kids you don’t see on ESPN: the gymnast flipping on a worn mat, the wrestler grinding for a D-II shot, the swimmer making laps in the pool at 5 a.m. every day. ...
While public focus has been locked on eye-popping NIL (name, image, and likeness) deals and the uncontained transfer portal, the true threat to the system is much less obvious. Here’s the economic reality: Football and men’s basketball haul in over 93 percent of the cash — billions that keep swimming, softball, and wrestling alive. Women’s sports and Olympic sports don’t turn a profit. They never will. But they are the heart and soul of the college sports system, pumping opportunity to kids who’d otherwise be sidelined.
I’ve seen it — teammates who’d never have the chance to set foot on a college campus without the promise of sports. Over-allocate the cash to pay football and basketball stars and/or exclude many institutions from profit streams and media exposure, and universities will swing the axe on the sports that can’t pay their own bills. Non-revenue sports, Olympic sports, women’s sports? Gone. Dreams? Buried. ...
The NCAA is a cartel and operates under an outdated model that is being methodically dismantled in court. A bevy of litigation cracked the dam, and House v. NCAA and Johnson v. NCAA are the beginning of a flood that will soon drown the economic model that has sustained the system.
Of course, these court decisions are all well legally justified under the accepted interpretation of antitrust law, but the fallout is a gut punch to a great American institution. If the money gets siphoned off, it’s not just the NCAA that bleeds — it’s Mia, the 14-year-old gymnast with Olympic fire in her eyes, and Jake, the wrestler pinning his future on a scholarship.
Now the Autonomy Four conferences smell blood. They’re begging Congress for an antitrust exemption, protection from the lawsuits they’ve earned. Their proposals sound reasonable, right? Stabilize the chaos, they say. Wrong! It’s a Trojan horse....
The top 40 most-viewed college football programs already hog 89.3 percent of TV eyeballs and 95 percent of media cash. Give the Autonomy Four (especially the Big 10 and SEC) a free antitrust hall pass, and they’ll build a super conference, a gilded monopoly that starves everyone else of the revenue needed to provide opportunity to more than 500,000 student athletes per year. Of 134 FBS schools, 90 or more could lose funding for Olympic sports, women’s teams, and even football itself (not to mention the FCS and Division II). Local towns could crumble. Smaller colleges would fade. College sports would shrink from a national treasure to an elite clique, and countless dreams would be crushed.
This isn’t about left or right; it’s about right and wrong. The NCAA is broken, but handing the keys to a few fat cats is worse. America thrives on competition, not cozy cartels blessed by D.C.
The Trump crew and Congress are on it, and I’m glad. But they’ve got to see through the smoke. Reject the Autonomy Four’s power grab and recognize that those making the biggest legislative push are simply advocating for their own selfish interests; they don’t care about the long-term health of the institution, the country, or the incredible opportunity college sports provide to those much less fortunate.
Of course, he says almost nothing about the transfer portal nor the abuse of the NIL system. Nothing about how courts are now erasing limits on eligibility or how many years athletes participate in college sports. yeesh.
The Federalist website
Posted on 3/25/25 at 5:54 pm to WestCoastAg
Very much so. He just focuses on paying players and that's it. He does not look at the overall state of college football. The portal has been a disaster and nothing much can be done about it absent legislation thanks to the courts. It is perfectly reasonable to have limits on eligibility but thanks to the courts, can't have them anymore. It's running off coaches, it's going to bankrupt programs, and eventually the game itself will suffer.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 5:59 pm to prplhze2000
quote:is he though?
Very much so
Posted on 3/25/25 at 6:08 pm to prplhze2000
Did we read the same thing? It sounds like he thinks the current system is broken, not that he’s defending it.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 6:22 pm to prplhze2000
quote:
The portal has been a disaster
It hasn’t been a disaster for the people college is supposed to benefit: the students.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 6:27 pm to prplhze2000
Did we read the same article?
Posted on 3/25/25 at 6:30 pm to prplhze2000
Actually, I read it and he's not wrong.
This post was edited on 3/25/25 at 6:32 pm
Posted on 3/25/25 at 6:54 pm to Globetrotter747
quote:
It hasn’t been a disaster for the people college is supposed to benefit: the students.

Posted on 3/25/25 at 7:16 pm to prplhze2000
Very rarely will you find someone who is gung-ho about the NIL/Player empowerment shite that actually likes and cares about CFB.
It’s why I have a rule where I don’t care about the opinions of people who don’t care about or like the thing they are opining on.
It’s why I have a rule where I don’t care about the opinions of people who don’t care about or like the thing they are opining on.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 7:33 pm to Globetrotter747
I
quote:
t hasn’t been a disaster for the people college is supposed to benefit: the students.
In 2023, 55 percent of the football players in the portal never found a new team. Compared to previously when players were almost guaranteed a 5-year scholarship.
Sounds great.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 7:44 pm to prplhze2000
Not many things to argue with there.
The current model of college sports and anticipated revenue sharing will destroy the smaller sports and at some point. If you want this nation to get even fatter, destroy college athletic dreams for about 400,000 kids each year. That will ripple right on down to high school sports.
If CFB collapses (I still believe that is a strong possibility), then everything collapses and it'll be more than half a million kids not playing sports in college, and it'll be carnage in athletic departments when the athletes are gone and all the coaches and staffs are without a paycheck.
What's especially irritating is that Title IX destroyed men's sports and no one said a word. I think the final tally was close to 500 men's teams got the axe due to Title IX. No one gave a damn. That's about 500 teams each year that could be filled with men playing college sports and that dream is gone for thousands of men every year.
Everyone that has been meddling with college athletics has failed. Federal govt, the NCAA, the people in charge of this CFP - all of them have been failures.
The current model of college sports and anticipated revenue sharing will destroy the smaller sports and at some point. If you want this nation to get even fatter, destroy college athletic dreams for about 400,000 kids each year. That will ripple right on down to high school sports.
If CFB collapses (I still believe that is a strong possibility), then everything collapses and it'll be more than half a million kids not playing sports in college, and it'll be carnage in athletic departments when the athletes are gone and all the coaches and staffs are without a paycheck.
What's especially irritating is that Title IX destroyed men's sports and no one said a word. I think the final tally was close to 500 men's teams got the axe due to Title IX. No one gave a damn. That's about 500 teams each year that could be filled with men playing college sports and that dream is gone for thousands of men every year.
Everyone that has been meddling with college athletics has failed. Federal govt, the NCAA, the people in charge of this CFP - all of them have been failures.
Posted on 3/25/25 at 8:08 pm to POTUS2024
Yep. There’s not been a single significant change in the NCAA that has benefited the majority of college athletes in probably 40 years.
Posted on 3/26/25 at 7:47 am to prplhze2000
quote:
but thanks to the courts
why do you hate the free market?
if anything pro sports leagues should lose their antitrust exemptions
Posted on 3/26/25 at 7:56 am to prplhze2000
When it comes to the topics he’s talking about in the article, I didn’t see anything he’s wrong about. I love football and baseball, but I also recognize the human need of the other 500K ish student athletes that just want to compete in their chosen sport.
Posted on 3/26/25 at 7:57 am to Globetrotter747
quote:
hasn’t been a disaster for the people college is supposed to benefit: the students.
Lmao
This is like saying "my 4 year old only wants to eat candy and ice cream at every meal and only drink surge so I gave in and let him. His overall health is atrocious and he doesn't follow instructions but hes mostly happy and likes to eat so what's the problem?"
Posted on 3/26/25 at 8:09 am to Globetrotter747
It is better for the top end “students” err athletes
I’d imagine the guys that transfer four times and don’t complete a degree are not better off.
I’d imagine the guys that transfer four times and don’t complete a degree are not better off.
Posted on 3/26/25 at 8:20 am to prplhze2000
NIL deals will become more sophisticated. We are just at the entry level of it now.
Rather than just attracting talent, the future will be made on retaining it as well.
He’s right that football and basketball make sports happen for thousands of other athletes in college. Those of us with daughters (no pics) appreciate that our kids get to participate in sports they love while they still are physically able to do so and recognize revenue sports make it happen.
To paraphrase a favorite line from Moneyball - “we are all told we can no longer play the game - it may be tomorrow, it may be years from now, but we are all told”.
Rather than just attracting talent, the future will be made on retaining it as well.
He’s right that football and basketball make sports happen for thousands of other athletes in college. Those of us with daughters (no pics) appreciate that our kids get to participate in sports they love while they still are physically able to do so and recognize revenue sports make it happen.
To paraphrase a favorite line from Moneyball - “we are all told we can no longer play the game - it may be tomorrow, it may be years from now, but we are all told”.
Posted on 3/26/25 at 9:08 am to WestCoastAg
quote:
and hes wrong?
He’s not wrong, but it’s not clear to me why his anger is focused on the power four.
They didn’t (directly) cause this mess. Yeah they’re trying to capitalize on it and position themselves the best they can…but everyone is doing that, whether it’s conferences, schools or the five star players asking to get paid for a campus visit.
The “old framework” is history and it’s every man/woman/entity for itself. He’s right that it’s a catastrophic nightmare for the non-revenue sports in particular, but I don’t think the conferences are to blame.
This post was edited on 3/26/25 at 9:12 am
Posted on 3/26/25 at 9:53 am to Globetrotter747
You aren't supposed to get rich while you are in college.
I am ready to go the way of the Ivy league and pull the plug on the current model. I don't want to be the minor league for the NFL and NBA and all the other professional sports. I don't care if it is intramural level athletes. Put a Gator jersey on and I will watch and root for them, only if they are a student who qualified with everyone else, and not an athlete who skipped the line and has no business going to college. They don't want to act like they are going to school, and I don't want to listen to them being interviewed as they are unable to speak in complete sentences. I want college students playing college sports.
Let the pro leagues figure out what to do with these great high school athletes in their late teen years. Baseball has it figured out, everyone else can too.
I am ready to go the way of the Ivy league and pull the plug on the current model. I don't want to be the minor league for the NFL and NBA and all the other professional sports. I don't care if it is intramural level athletes. Put a Gator jersey on and I will watch and root for them, only if they are a student who qualified with everyone else, and not an athlete who skipped the line and has no business going to college. They don't want to act like they are going to school, and I don't want to listen to them being interviewed as they are unable to speak in complete sentences. I want college students playing college sports.
Let the pro leagues figure out what to do with these great high school athletes in their late teen years. Baseball has it figured out, everyone else can too.
This post was edited on 3/26/25 at 9:54 am
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