Home
Articles
Photos
Interviews
Forums
New posts
Search forums
Georgia Tech Recruiting
Dashboard
What's new
New posts
New profile posts
Latest activity
Chat
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Home
Forums
Georgia Tech Athletics
Georgia Tech Football
NIL, Transfers, and Stratospheric Salaries. What Is the Future of GT Football and College Football in General?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="CEB" data-source="post: 967337" data-attributes="member: 4905"><p>While I agree, in my opinion, nothing will be done about parity because there is little interest in parity. </p><p>1. The schools for the most part make the rules and the ones at the top of the heap won’t give up their advantage. </p><p>2. The really big cash grab at the moment is coming from broadcasting and will presumably continue to be the case in some way / shape / form. Having 80+ teams on equal footing isn’t beneficial to that model. Its expensive to broadcast 40-70 games a week and I think the media would be happy broadcasting far fewer, yet higher revenue games. </p><p>I think they’ll start worrying about “parity” once they have their top tier of 40-ish teams…. And to your first point, that will likely coincide with a decoupling from academics.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CEB, post: 967337, member: 4905"] While I agree, in my opinion, nothing will be done about parity because there is little interest in parity. 1. The schools for the most part make the rules and the ones at the top of the heap won’t give up their advantage. 2. The really big cash grab at the moment is coming from broadcasting and will presumably continue to be the case in some way / shape / form. Having 80+ teams on equal footing isn’t beneficial to that model. Its expensive to broadcast 40-70 games a week and I think the media would be happy broadcasting far fewer, yet higher revenue games. I think they’ll start worrying about “parity” once they have their top tier of 40-ish teams…. And to your first point, that will likely coincide with a decoupling from academics. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
What jersey number did Joshua Nesbitt wear?
Post reply
Home
Forums
Georgia Tech Athletics
Georgia Tech Football
NIL, Transfers, and Stratospheric Salaries. What Is the Future of GT Football and College Football in General?
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
Accept
Learn more…
Top