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My Greatest Fear for UK Football

If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
So it is based on TV revenue and UK was 9th amongst all college football teams in TV viewership. Hope that answers this for you!
 
UK is one of the top 10 "most watched". On-field performance won't get them excluded if they still bring large numbers of consumers into the equation. Make sure to encourage others to buy season tickets if you're still that worried about it

Because it is absolutely true. You can’t be more happy than you are grateful and I do think as football fans we have forgotten how to be grateful. We will never be able to hang with Auburn, LSU, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma or Tennessee on a regular basis because the built-in culture, history, resources and brand power are light years ahead of us…and that’s only the teams within our own conference. I haven’t even mentioned Ohio State, Clemson, USC, Michigan, Notre Dame, Florida State, Miami, Penn State, Nebraska, or Oregon. These are all programs who, even if we went all in on football for decades, would still be behind in the pecking order on a regular basis as they all have an insane host of advantages over us. I think being grateful would be helpful us…strong fan support and job stability can be a unique draw for us when it is time to seek the next coach as we don’t have much else to uniquely offer compared to other SEC schools.
You forgot Louisville.
 
It’s absolutely true. Will never happen. We may catch lightning in a bottle one or two times every 10-15 years and make a playoff (in a 16 team playoff). I doubt it though. But never consistently compete. I guess I’ll eat crow one day if it ever happens. But if it does, we will probably be dead.
A playoff for this program would need to be from a 128 team pool.
 
If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
Member schools cannot be removed unless they do something egregious AND get voted out by a 2/3 majority. Google can help you avoid contemplating nonsensical scenarios.
 
There is no way Kentucky will be left out if the BIG and SEC decide to create a super league. None.
This is true. The only way to dissolve the league is with a 3/4 vote. Schools not included in any upgrade would veto. The league office has shown loyalty to all members, as they have a fiduciary responsibility to do, and if the commissioner's office negotiated in bad faith, then they woul dget sued by the schools being left out. It's important to understand how contractual relationships/associations are governed and I can see many commenting who have a deficit of understanding in this regard.
 
I don't know. I mean the G5 conferences don't spend the ridiculous amounts of money the big boys do and, for the most part, they play 2nd tier football. I don't know the numbers but I would guess that there are a lot more alumni in the schools who'd opt out of the NIL arms race than the ones who want the Wild West. Thus, there would be a lot of potential for reasonably lucrative TV contracts - not elite level, but they wouldn't need to receive $55M every year to compete (and we're not competitive right now even with all that revenue).

I think a conference that picks up regional teams in the ACC, SEC and B10 who don't want to participate in the ridiculous spending could form a tier between FCS and elites, have their own playoff system, etc. Wouldn't draw the audience, for sure, but there would be a ton of alumni who would attend games, give to the university, watch games on TV, etc. and it would be good, but not elite, football. A better version of football than FCS but not as good as the upper tier. If the powers that be don't rein in this system, I think this will become a viable option for UK, Vandy, UC, UofL, WVA, IL, IU, Purdue, Northwestern, maybe Wake Forest, Duke, UVa, Va Tech, etc. A 12-team league where most of the teams are within reasonable driving distance. The same type of conference could be formed in Midwest, Southwest and West and structure schedules and playoffs along the lines of the NFL. I think it could work and the fans would be just as happy being more competitive at FCS+ level than being dog crap at the elite level.
I like this, though I would actually love a set up like Euro football where teams can rise up or be relegated based upon performance. Top team rise and bottom teams drop to the lower league annually or maybe you judge over 2-3 year blocks of time. This incentivizes excellence and punishes ineptness.
 
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The answer is simple. All teams join the National Organization - NCAA or whatever it becomes. All revenues generated from all sources other than a schools individual ticket sales, game concessions, merchandise sold at events and parking fees goes to that organization. All players of all teams will be compensated from the gross pool - evenly- from the association. Each school would submit its roster to the organization. The players would receive 50% of the players pool earnings during the year - the final 50% would be paid after the end of the last game that team plays in for that season, be it regular season, bowl game or playoff. If a player opts out of the last game - he forfeits his remaining compensation. If a school cheats - it is banned from playing for one year and players may be granted immediate transferability. Players may only transfer once. No more NIL individual deals period. All marketing revenue also goes to the national organization.

After all players have been compensated - then individual schools will share in the revenue left from media revenues, marketing income, etc. This revenue would be split based on conference affilations and each conference would divide that money according to how each conference decided to divide it. However, the money could not go to player compensation - other than tuition, supplies, health care, room and board for the athlete.

This effectively takes us back to where the game was 5 years ago - as to players choosing which team they want to play for. Players can go professional at the end of any season after they finish their high school eligibility - but once they elect to turn professional - they lose all remaining collegiate eligibility. A plan like this treats all scholarship players equally and all are paid. Individual tuition, supply stipend and room and board would be provided by the school as it was previously. Whether a player chooses to play for Alabama, Western Kentucky or any FBS program his compensation from the National organization would be the same. The National organization would decide its requirements for eligibility for membership from a institution. Scholarship limits would remain the same as they are now.

This needs to be done for the integrity and future of the game in my opinion. No matter what a school charges for tickets and no matter how many tickets a school sells would not change the compensation of any players. They are getting an education and then will be being paid. The top players will still end in the professional ranks and their futures are not in jeopardy as they can elect to quit playing and go pro at any point in their career. I like the 3 year rule previously required - but to be fair to everyone - this change keeps teams more stable and doesn't punish the superstars from going pro and making money sooner rather than later.


Go Big Blue1
A well thought out socialistic answer to the problem. Never took you for a Bernie bros.
 
I can’t find a way to upload a photo from my library because I’m an idiot but here are the school NIL spendings in college football last year:

1. Oregon 23M
2. Texas 22.2M
3. Ohio State 20.2M
4. LSU 20.1M
5. Georgia 18.3M
6. Texas A&M 17.2M
7. Michigan 16.3M
8. Alabama 16M
9. Florida 15.8M
10. Clemson 15.2M
11. Oklahoma 14.8M
12. Penn State 13.7M

As of December 2024, the median salary for full-time workers in Kentucky is $51,911, while the average salary is $68,199.

We are, to put it bluntly, a poor state, without the history to have total buy in like other states in football such as Alabama or Oklahoma. If we were a rich fanbase maybe we could match those type of NIL numbers, but that just isn’t reality.
Here is another published accounting. We are not far off.
18. Kentucky Wildcats: $11.2 million

17. Arkansas Razorbacks: $11.5 million
16. Auburn Tigers: $11.58 million

15. Tennessee Volunteers: $11.6 million

14. Virginia Cavaliers: $12.7 million

13. Michigan State Spartans: $13 million

12. Indiana Hoosiers: $13.6 million
11. Penn State Nittany Lions: $13.7 million
 
Here is another published accounting. We are not far off.
18. Kentucky Wildcats: $11.2 million

17. Arkansas Razorbacks: $11.5 million
16. Auburn Tigers: $11.58 million

15. Tennessee Volunteers: $11.6 million

14. Virginia Cavaliers: $12.7 million

13. Michigan State Spartans: $13 million

12. Indiana Hoosiers: $13.6 million
11. Penn State Nittany Lions: $13.7 million
There is nothing to prove these are accurate. There are zero true NIL reportings. Tenn has multiple collectives and one of them supposedly raised more than what this says they spent. Ole Miss shows up way down these lists, even though they are able to out pay for top players consistently. Im not saying UK isn’t 18th, but these numbers are not true
 
Here is another published accounting. We are not far off.
18. Kentucky Wildcats: $11.2 million

17. Arkansas Razorbacks: $11.5 million
16. Auburn Tigers: $11.58 million

15. Tennessee Volunteers: $11.6 million

14. Virginia Cavaliers: $12.7 million

13. Michigan State Spartans: $13 million

12. Indiana Hoosiers: $13.6 million
11. Penn State Nittany Lions: $13.7 million

Someone isn't reporting correct numbers, AU is spending double that amount on their NIL. They spent nearly that much on a HS qb. Pulled multiple 5* WR.
 
If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
Huh? There is zero chance UK is left out of a 48 team league. UL is a team is who legitimately worry about its future in big time football bc A) it's brand is not attractive, B ) its academics are poor (this is important to college presidents. UK does not have these worries.

If the field were cut to 20 or so, then yes, there is concern. but, at some point, Alabama can't play Ohio state every week so I don't think this would ever happen. The big 10 and SEC schools are untouchable.
 
Honestly I'd rather drop football than get our brains beat out once a week. Let basketball pay for the Olympic sports. Heck, glad to see the SEC take basketball seriously.
 
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Here is another published accounting. We are not far off.
18. Kentucky Wildcats: $11.2 million

17. Arkansas Razorbacks: $11.5 million
16. Auburn Tigers: $11.58 million

15. Tennessee Volunteers: $11.6 million

14. Virginia Cavaliers: $12.7 million

13. Michigan State Spartans: $13 million

12. Indiana Hoosiers: $13.6 million
11. Penn State Nittany Lions: $13.7 million
Tennessee fans absolutely keenly aware that 11.6M isn’t even remotely close to giving them a team capable of competing. Thought you didn’t want to be mediocre. Better pony up big time. If you all want to be a power so bad, get 20M together you can be Ohio State or Oregon. Coz even the upper mid tier SEC teams are aware that’s what it takes to get to the top.

 
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I can’t find a way to upload a photo from my library because I’m an idiot but here are the school NIL spendings in college football last year:

1. Oregon 23M
2. Texas 22.2M
3. Ohio State 20.2M
4. LSU 20.1M
5. Georgia 18.3M
6. Texas A&M 17.2M
7. Michigan 16.3M
8. Alabama 16M
9. Florida 15.8M
10. Clemson 15.2M
11. Oklahoma 14.8M
12. Penn State 13.7M

As of December 2024, the median salary for full-time workers in Kentucky is $51,911, while the average salary is $68,199.

We are, to put it bluntly, a poor state, without the history to have total buy in like other states in football such as Alabama or Oklahoma. If we were a rich fanbase maybe we could match those type of NIL numbers, but that just isn’t reality.
Which NIL list is this?
 
Rumor: North Carolina fans already chirping about Bill Belicheck drawing too much attention away NIL wise starting to cause them basketball NiL issues. I’ll grab the link if you haven’t heard the rumor. Unfortunately, you have to have fans with very deep pockets to compete at football on a regular basis. 11.5 million dollars spent on NIL last year would have gotten you ninth best in the SEC and not even in the top 16 teams in the country.
Some of these things should settle out after the settlement operations start taking place. The athletic departments have been afforded a greater degree of control again and shouldn’t be as much haphazard contribution or spending as much as it will be calculated decisions by admins. Schools will be paying profit share and NIL to players and any outside NIL deals aren’t going to be this ‘collective’ world we live in as much because any NiL deal of size is going to be assessed for legitimacy by an established board of review.
 
Some of these things should settle out after the settlement operations start taking place. The athletic departments have been afforded a greater degree of control again and shouldn’t be as much haphazard contribution or spending as much as it will be calculated decisions by admins. Schools will be paying profit share and NIL to players and any outside NIL deals aren’t going to be this ‘collective’ world we live in as much because any NiL deal of size is going to be assessed for legitimacy by an established board of review.
The only concern there —- we don’t know if that actually could just inflate the contract value of prospective players. You’re talking about a big arms race that may begin as soon as universities get the green light. More cash to all the big schools as immediate resource equals bigger contract potential for NIL suitors. That part is speculation but I think a valid concern. As for our school, I feel pretty confident that both football and basketball fans might wind up dissatisfied on this front, as our AD (and I strongly disagree with this view) sees the athletic department as a collective unit with mostly equal coexisting parts. I fear we will be devoting big money relative to many other schools on programs that really don’t matter much to the commonwealth such as women’s rugby and water polo being treated as having the same value as football and basketball. Or at least that’s how I interpreted some comments made on the KSR radio show a few months back. Could be disastrous if true.
 
The only concern there —- we don’t know if that actually could just inflate the contract value of prospective players. You’re talking about a big arms race that may begin as soon as universities get the green light. More cash to all the big schools as immediate resource equals bigger contract potential for NIL suitors. That part is speculation but I think a valid concern. As for our school, I feel pretty confident that both football and basketball fans might wind up dissatisfied on this front, as our AD (and I strongly disagree with this view) sees the athletic department as a collective unit with mostly equal coexisting parts. I fear we will be devoting big money relative to many other schools on programs that really don’t matter much to the commonwealth such as women’s rugby and water polo being treated as having the same value as football and basketball. Or at least that’s how I interpreted some comments made on the KSR radio show a few months back. Could be disastrous if true.
Could be. Once the settling out starts, and I’ve held this opinion since the day of the Ed obannon ruling, is this eventually ends in collective bargaining or it doesn’t end. The biggest problem to this point is that it’s all being driven by fragmented court rulings and a largely mia ncaa.
 
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Could be. Once the settling out starts, and I’ve held this opinion since the day of the Ed obannon ruling, is this eventually ends in collective bargaining or it doesn’t end. The biggest problem to this point is that it’s all being driven by fragmented court rulings and a largely mia ncaa.
Sadly, I agree
 
Tennessee fans absolutely keenly aware that 11.6M isn’t even remotely close to giving them a team capable of competing. Thought you didn’t want to be mediocre. Better pony up big time. If you all want to be a power so bad, get 20M together you can be Ohio State or Oregon. Coz even the upper mid tier SEC teams are aware that’s what it takes to get to the top.

Those numbers aren’t real. Auburn is beating Bama for all the top in state recruits. They outbidding a lot of teams higher on that list. Ole Miss dominated the portal last year and doing alright this year. They are not doing that by spending less than UK is. Tenn has a 2 mil qb. They just paid for another 5 star OT and the #1 overall player in ‘26. I don’t believe the garbage that UK has the worst NIL is the SEC but they are not almost even with Tenn
 
Those numbers aren’t real. Auburn is beating Bama for all the top in state recruits. They outbidding a lot of teams higher on that list. Ole Miss dominated the portal last year and doing alright this year. They are not doing that by spending less than UK is. Tenn has a 2 mil qb. They just paid for another 5 star OT and the #1 overall player in ‘26. I don’t believe the garbage that UK has the worst NIL is the SEC but they are not almost even with Tenn
You’re probably right about that.
 
Those numbers aren’t real. Auburn is beating Bama for all the top in state recruits. They outbidding a lot of teams higher on that list. Ole Miss dominated the portal last year and doing alright this year. They are not doing that by spending less than UK is. Tenn has a 2 mil qb. They just paid for another 5 star OT and the #1 overall player in ‘26. I don’t believe the garbage that UK has the worst NIL is the SEC but they are not almost even with Tenn

UGA isnt toward the top, we miss every kid looking for a payday. It's really not hard to tell who is spending big. In the portal the big spenders are Auburn, who is being fundamental by the yellowwood guy, OM who has a big booster involved with Realtree, ATM who has multiple big booster and Missouri. UGA has zero from the portal. Our big booster is a liquor distributor.
 
If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
As I have observed now for the last two years I have come to a conclusion that I would have laughed at and thought it crazy for the last 60 years of my life, but UK would be better off to not be in the 64 teams you speak of! Here me out and then think about it. As of the moment do you really think UK, with the current NIL rules - will EVER have a winning season again? I personally doubt it - unless we move down to a conference that isn't in the group of 64 you speak of!

Now think about this - would you rather go to games and see us win 9, 10 or 11 games a year and make a decent bowl game or go to the stadium and watch us win one or zero conference games and end up 3-9, 4-8 or maybe 5-7 every now an then? UK fans have shown themselves to be resilent in the past - because we always thought we could build a team. But when we were lousy - many years the crowds, after the 3rd home game or homecoming, became less than 2/3 full. Its not fun going to the games after spending a $1,000 on everything to go to that game to get crushed! Fans will not support a team in lousy weather that has no chance to win either. That is the current future of UK football as long as this NIL situation is not fixed in some way! I want to say this - UK can NOT fix NIL! It has to come from all the schools doing something as a group! Will that happen - probably not! Why - TEXAS has so much money as an example - they like it this way! They will buy championships! It's not just TEXAS either - and everyone on this board realizes this fact!

But just think, if we were playing in a conference like the ACC, as it exists at the moment - we could reasonably expect to win 8 or more games every year - because we would be playing teams on even footing. Do you think the Tulane fans have been having fun at the Stadium the last 2 years? That could be us! But that will not happen in the SEC. We let that dream get away over 50 years ago - when UK refused to get in the football arms race. After the late 50's we just didn't care about football enough on the right levels to be competitive. We could have competed with Ole Miss and Alabama - but we liked being the Basketball only champions! Football was something to do before Keeneland opened and basketball season began! I'm just sharing facts - I'm not saying its the fans fault here. We had great fans - fans that deserved so much more than they got! Even now, the football fans are not taken seriously by the UK administration! How many years have fans complained about sound systems, wifi and various other things at the stadium - and most still hasn't been addressed. We can pay a coach $9 million - but we can't fix the sound system - come on! This is just a drop in the bucket of things. Only about 15 -20 schools in the entire country can compete in professional college football now. UK is not one of them.

Go Big Blue!
 
0% CHANCE the SEC would leave UK out. Even if it was for football only, they have been a SEC member for a very long time. That is silly to even think it. there will be average / middle of the road teams, not all teams will be elite.
 
0% CHANCE the SEC would leave UK out. Even if it was for football only, they have been a SEC member for a very long time. That is silly to even think it. there will be average / middle of the road teams, not all teams will be elite.
If they want to keep us because we're a cupcake, I'd rather leave.
 
If they want to keep us because we're a cupcake, I'd rather leave.
Nowhere in my post did I even remotely suggest that. UK is far from a cupcake. Just ask Ole Miss and several other top programs we have beat. ONE losing season and fans are acting like we have been Joker Phillips era bad the last 10 years. Fair weathered fanning at its finest.
 
There is nothing to prove these are accurate. There are zero true NIL reportings. Tenn has multiple collectives and one of them supposedly raised more than what this says they spent. Ole Miss shows up way down these lists, even though they are able to out pay for top players consistently. Im not saying UK isn’t 18th, but these numbers are not true
They may or may not be true, but you can't refute published reports with "because I said so" and not provide data to support your thesis. I'd love to see any information you've seen to shed more light on this.
 
Ric neuheisel ( cs.? ) today suggested that one thing the group of five schools need to do is cultivate working relationships with a power four school or two. For instance they woukd say to Alabama or Georgia or UK send us your backups who you don’t expect to play this year . We will coach them . Give them playing time and give them back to you the next year . That might be one way the group of five survive . Otherwise , due to finances it is going to be tough for them to survive .

The pier 4 poached 277 players from the group of five last year and 88 of them were all conference on first or second team.
Interesting times.
 
If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
Of course
 
Where did your list come from? I have searched many times and can’t find any list of what each school paid. What I can find and it is on several sites that Sanders and Hunter have combined NIL deals over 10 million. Now most of that isn’t from a collective. Yet Colorado is not in the top 20 of that list. ON3 has them two making more than UK and Tenn paid their teams, according to this list.

On3 has a list of the collectives that have raised the most money and Tenn’s Spyre is #2 behind only OSU’s biggest collective. Yet that list has them 15th. Again my question is where did they get that? BBH said his came from Sports Talk J. Is that a credible source, a YouTube channel? They got these numbers when no one else can? Sorry I don’t buy it
 
We will have to wait and see what the current bill in federal court does. NIL is set to change in a big way, and with the ncaa having to pay players now, the next few years will look diffrent.. The proposed rule is any NIL deal over $600 would have to go through a clearing house, and if deemed not based on NIL standards, be rejected. Will have to wait and see what the standards are, and how they are enforced. If this passes, I think these huge numbers are going to drop very quickly.
 
Links are appreciated.

Michigan just spent 12m on their QB for the 25 class, they are pulling kids wanting 1-2m out of portal, if you think they did that with 16m I really don't know what to tell you. As for links you can look them up if you don't believe the numbers, but they were quite proud of paying 12m for the QB. Tn spent 8m on their QB, that's the first big NIL deal, surely you know about it, but they spent 3.1m on the rest of their roster. Tn just announced they are adding 10$ NIL tax to their tickets, 105,000 per game, x7 games, 7.5m talent tax just from ticket sales, you think they are getting less than 3m from all their other sources?
 
I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.

Back when the conference had 12 teams, and there was no SEC Network, we were second only to Bama in revenue produced by our Tier 3 rights . . . for one locally broadcast FB game, two basketball games, and other sports.

And there is an interesting (and frequently forgotten) reason for Kentucky’s strong market value for the SEC and the SEC Network: we form the Southern/Southwestern border of 4 states that host no SEC teams.

The MASSIVE diaspora of Kentucky folk into states to our North had a long-lasting effect on our market value: move one state North of Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, and Louisiana, and you are still in the SEC footprint. Hence, even if your allegiance remains with your former (more Southern) State, you have no net affect on SEC viewership: you are still in the footprint. Kentucky fans in Michigan,
Ohio, etc., have proven inter-generational.

Kentucky’s old “Kentucky Network” included (at varying times) TV stations in Chicago, Cleveland, Indy, Detroit, Cincy (duh), West Virginia, etc., etc., etc., along with radio stations in the mid-west. Our radio and TV announcer’s frequently bragged of having the largest University based TV and Radio network in the nation. The eyes once cast on local broadcasts in those states North of us are now subscribers to the SEC Network.

And we surrendered all of that (well, 90 percent of it) with the establishment of the SEC Network, and have still profited handsomely.

The numbers ranking the schools based on market value of Tier 3 rights was shocking: Bama just over 10 million; Kentucky at 9.5 million, thence trending down to the Mississippi’s and Vandy, each below 2 million.

Kentucky is one of the last 4 programs that will ever be overlooked by conference affiliation, along with Bama, Texas, and Texas A & M (and maybe Oklahoma).

The fear of poor football costing us our conference status is misplaced: the last objective financial/market measurement of our literal value was 2011/12, when we had posted an overall losing record the prior 50+ years . . . next-to-last in the SEC, but still the second most valuable “property” within the conference.
 
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UGA isnt toward the top, we miss every kid looking for a payday. It's really not hard to tell who is spending big. In the portal the big spenders are Auburn, who is being fundamental by the yellowwood guy, OM who has a big booster involved with Realtree, ATM who has multiple big booster and Missouri. UGA has zero from the portal. Our big booster is a liquor distributor.
Auburn sat out of the portal last year and focused on high school recruiting. They were building a cash reserve to unload in the portal this year.

Forget receivers I bet they spent 6-8m on their 2 QB’s.
 
If/When the Big 10 and SEC decides to create their own governing body for Football and hand picks who is included in the new alliance, will UK be included?

I think if it’s 64 teams (ex: 4 divisions of 16 teams), UK makes that cut. But if the decision is to only have 48 teams, I don’t think UK is included. It’s absolutely why UK CANNOT stink it up again next year!

Up until this year I thought UK would be safe even at 48. But this past year was a disaster. UK has to right the ship quickly. IMO.

I hope I’m totally wrong but it’s all about TV revenue and you have to put a good product on the field.
Stoops here for another year is a nightmare . My god with the mass exodus of players, and the schedule next year , it's going to get dreadfully ugly . THANKS MITCH your asinine contracts
 
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