So a few more points on this.
1. We aint the NFL and do not want to be. The NFL is boring
2. College football is about tradition, not a sanitized socialism broken down world
3. As a Tech fan, you understand your place and love those shiny years, 1990, 2009, 2014
4. Not to get political here, but much of what is suggested will limit how many of the kids, from let's say low means to enable them to get into college and have a chance for the next level and maybe even a degree. I truly believe that college football has been the greatest success story of integration in America.
I used to like the NFL, but don't anymore and haven't for quite some time. The NFL used to be full of great personalities. Think Bradshaw, and Stabler, and Staubach, and Mean Joe, and Tarkenton, etc. Each team had its own personality as well, often reflecting the persona of city it represented or the coach at the helm. Teams got their own jerseys made locally (no league-wide contracts on uniforms), and players made salaries similar to those of your highest-paid professional in your neighborhood. In many ways, they were 'regular' folks you could relate to. And this wasn't antique ball; it was all in the Super-Bowl era.
Most of the teams in the NFL now are interchangeable, the same product with different-colored uniforms. Like NASCAR and many other pro sports, the league has become faceless. More fluff with billion-dollar stadiums and pyrotechnics shows, circus-like media and irritating computer graphics, all masking an increasingly vanilla on-field product. Some teams are better than others, but they still look the same, like the cars of today, which you can't tell apart without getting up close and looking at the logo.
I don't want college football to resemble pro sports in any way like that. Yet, that seems the direction elite college football has been trending for some time now. Alabama is more like a corporation than a football team, and as much as I hate to think, even Clemson is to a degree. Certainly UGA is. I don't know the answer to any of this, but would ideally like to see teams consisting of regular students (no scholarship players) who fulfilled all the normal academic requirements for their respective institutions. Interested guys from the student body would sign up and try out for the team, just like in high school. Teams could be grouped into conferences or leagues based on the similarities of their academics. Figuring out a national champion might be difficult, but maybe it could be based on the 'model' that existed pre-BCS. This system could leave space for a minor pro league, a bridge between high school and the pros for the more elite players. Like baseball and hockey, players could still be drafted from the college ranks instead of going minor-league.
There are a lot of flaws with an arrangement like this, and it would be difficult if not impossible to police. Also, the road to college might be denied to many whose only chance at an education is through athletic scholarships.
I remember the days when only a handful of games were even broadcast on a given Saturday. You had your own team you rooted for (listened to them on the radio), but watched a national powerhouse on TV, be it Notre Dame, USCw, Pitt, Nebraska, Michigan, Ohio State, etc., and also became a fan of one of those. In many ways I liked it better then. Sports didn't consume so many people's lives. You didn't absolutely
live for sports like the media and advertisers are trying to make us do today. And yet you still had those 'shiny' moments like beating Notre Dame in '76, or Alabama in '81, or UGA in '84, not to mention 1990... Posting the newspaper cutout of Dewberry and Curry celebrating at Sanford Stadium my senior year on the inside of my high school locker (in a school full of Bulldogs) was incredibly satisfying.