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Is college football on its way out?

Yes. You are right. I was wrong. From the NFL website it says as much.
It is a burden. :)

My friend, it saddens me to see other posters post about someone's "ignorance of the NFL & drafting" when they evidently don't know the rules themselves. We see that a lot on the other thread lol
 
Doesn't the NFL have a rule about 3 years removed from HS?
Yes. That is their rule that they implemented because they were tired of spending draft picks and money on teenagers who weren't ready for the NFL and if they thought things had changed, they would rescind it in a heart beat. The point of my comment was to refute the previous comment.
 
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There will continue to be changes (a Premier League model has bee discussed), but it is a quality product that generates tons of money.


Plus, the infrastructure is in place to keep it rolling.


NFL doesn’t want 18-19 year olds.
 
Yes. That is their rule that they implemented because they were tired of spending draft picks and money on teenagers who weren't ready for the NFL and if they thought things had changed, they would rescind it in a heart beat. The point of my comment was to refute the previous comment.


Exactly. Rules can be changed.

I don’t see them changing this one.


Maurice Claret says hello.
 
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Exactly. Rules can be changed.

I don’t see them changing this one.


Maurice Claret says hello.
Agreed. The NFL knows what they are doing. It's nearly impossible to evaluate the heart/character of 16/17 year olds, so their anti-trust and collective bargaining arrangement allows them to circumvent labor laws by refusing employment opportunities to anyone less than three years out of HS. This is good for college football, in that so many NFL ready sophomores and Jr's have to stay in college unlike basketball.
 
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They don’t like it but I have been listening to people complain about money in sports my entire life. This isn’t anything new. Could college football become a shell of its former self like NASCAR? Anything is possible but I don’t see any evidence of it at this point.
Funny, Nascar came to mind when I was typing, also bubbles busting in the stock market. Nascar was/is a different animal in my eyes, they over regulated themselves into failure, gas mileage winning races LOL.

I don't necessarily think it will be a sudden failure of college football, more like apathy for a while, and then turning into just a casual fan. It could be my own bias clouding my optics, that is exactly what happened to me with one and done. There are parallels between one and done and the wide open portal.
 
I just saw an interview on CNBC talking about investment firms buying college athletic programs at some point in the future. The thought is that the sports portion of the school will be put in an investment type vehicle that can be bought. That sounds like that will really get the competitive juices flowing for the average fan.

My opinion, if this model holds, inside of five years there won't be much interest in college sports, outside of the minor sports where the spirit of competition still exists, volleyball, women's basketball, baseball, etc.
I wonder how that will work as there are only 25 college sports programs that are profitable. The remaining 100
Power 4 and Gp5 conference lose an average of $16M/$17M annually. (Includes tv revenue)
 
I wonder how that will work as there are only 25 college sports programs that are profitable. The remaining 100
Power 4 and Gp5 conference lose an average of $16M/$17M annually. (Includes tv revenue)
Not sure, I thought the same and also thought it sounded like a terrible idea. It would probably change the trajectory for some schools, making them profitable where they were not before hand, Mark Cuban type owner comes to mind. You could generate money through an ETF type of format. I think it's not a great road to go down but it's probably not out of the realm of possibilities either.
 
I am finished with it. Just trash at this point. The JUCO experience no longer counting against your eligibility did it to me. I have no desire to see 18 year old's lineup against 29 year old's. The 29 year old's should have washed out of the NFL after the average NFL career of four years at age 26.

This from a guy who busted his ass to make the UK football team as a walk on punter in 1978.

BTW - Kevin Kelly was the starting punter while I was on the team. I was 18 and he was 27 years old in his last year of eligibility, but he spent four years between his Alabama and UK stints tracking submarines. When we would drive to the stadium to practice he was smoking cigarettes non-stop in his POS car, which was miles better than my POS Rambler. Totally different from today's 27 year old players.
 
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What I'm saying we all have to admit it now - its no longer Amateur football. It is professional - I really wonder now that is professional. - what is going to keep the true professional teams from drafting players right out of high school? Think about it. - why not? College football as I have known all of my life is officially over - its not because of the playoffs - I love that concept and wanted it for the last 30 plus years.

When players change teams every year to the highest bidder - the smaller schools lose out. How will teams like Western, Eastern, etc. survive? Every year their stars are going to be raided by the bigger schools. It used to be you could get to know the players - now the guy you love this year may be the guy you hate next season! You have no allegiance to a school now. It is truly professional. It may be easier to get good coaches at the college level - now too! Why, don;t worry about recruiting - except go to a school with huge sums of money to buy players- then buy your team every year. Everyone was laughing at Deion Sanders - now who is laughing? No reason to waste your time recruiting and developing - that is the past. Now you buy your team! I am very, very serious. College football is now truly a professional sport. It will be interesting to see how the fans react to this long term. You really have little reason to get excited about your team - unless you are one of the big guys now!

I was really upset at Coach Stoops and think we should have fired him or worked out a deal. Now, as I think about it. Why? Unless you hire a huge name as Coach who can bring lots of money with him - you are not going to win in college football. Its a new world and a new game. Enjoy the playoffs this year - it will be less and less fun as the players become more professional. I am going to give you another good example. This year everyone is raving about Indiana. They have a good coach for sure - but he brought his best players from his previous team and then raided other teams. I'm not saying he has a championship team - because he lucked out with a weak schedule. But in reality this is just the tip of the iceberg as to what we will be seeing every year from now on!

Go Big Blue! - Because that has always been my feelings - but it is fading very, very fast!
YES
 
Contracts are the only solution. If you have to stay in college for 3 years you should have to sign a three year contract with the team you sign with. Hell give them a signing bonus and guaranteed money just like the pros.
 
The issue that faces college sports now IMO is that for a long time it has been a de facto minor leagues for the pro leagues, whether its basketball or the NFL. If we're suddenly going to start scraping eligibility rules and have a wide gap in age participation then I think it defeats some of that intended purpose as you don't quite have the same cohort of 18-22/23 year olds playing and running out their eligiblity clock for the pro leagues. I think that harms what the sport has been for a long time.

I was always someone that very much believed in the old transfer rules of sitting a year. It protected G5 schools. As a WKU alum, there's zero way that any good players will stay there long term at all. They will be poached by the P4. Considering that it is unsurprising that attendance for football and basketball has declined considerably for games. It just reinforces how inconsequential your regional schools are.

I feel like a broken record a bit but the status quo isn't sustainable. The NCAA's leadership on this has been reactive rather than proactive and at this point I don't even think they have a strategy going forward. I say it's time for a CBA with the players to redefine what all of this means. If they won't agree, then you lock them out until they do. There's no constitutional right to play athletics anywhere. But someone needs to step in and provide some sanity to what is becoming a more insane system.
 
Very very few HS bodies are ready for NFL punishment. Even if they were eligible, I doubt many if any NFL teams would take a flying leap on 18 year olds who are still in the growing phase and engaged in pre-college fitness programs to make them better, faster, stronger for the next level. Too much risk IMO.

GBB!
 
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