Not sure who to respond to, but one of Kiffen's other points was
- 8 to 10 programs (Texas, TA&M, Bama, THE Ohio State, Notre Dame, USC, ...) can pay full freight for any player they need.
- The next 15 or so programs can scrape up some dough to be in the next tier (Ole Miss would be in there, maybe Arkansas, South Carolina?, ...)
- Schools 26-130 are on the outside looking in.
Almost all of the ACC is in category 3. The question is where Clemson, Miami, FSU, and maybe VT fit. Some of the SEC and B1G are in category 2, but a bunch are in category 3.
And this is why I think long term it would be better for college football to simply blow up and rebuild in a way that makes sense now.
Let those 25-30 programs that believe they can truly fund what is nothing more than a minor league NFL team do that.
Let the other schools reorganize football in a way that works for them. Legitimate NIL, absolutely. Farcical pay the player, no. Actually go to classes because fewer than 1% will ever likely play a down in the NFL, absolutely.
I would expect most, if not all of the 4 and 5* HS recruits go to those Top 25-30 teams. Everyone else is playing with 3 star guys who some will break out, but most won't.
What would be the one interesting school to watch would be ND. Their AD has consistently said for years that if there is a break in college football along academic lines ND would compete with the academic minded schools.
It should also be noted there is a very strong reason why ND has resisted joining the B10 and would continue to do so unless it feels that is the only way it can survive athletically. ND seems itself as a premier private, national (Catholic) institution. If they join the B10 they have deep concerns they will be come to be seen as a regional, private, religious university.