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Which of these 3 has mess up college football
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<blockquote data-quote="takethepoints" data-source="post: 971476" data-attributes="member: 265"><p>I think this is right. A "luxury tax" a la NBA would do a lot to even things out money-wise. But that isn't likely, given the way the NCAA is set up.</p><p></p><p>The fly in the ointment here is that even teams with loaded of money often have a hard time maintaining their win levels (Clemson). And some schools with very little money (comparatively) suddenly show up in the top 20 (Oregon State, TCU last year). Coaching means a lot and even the transfer portal doesn't necessary have a deciding effect. It is true that some schools who used to wait for Tech to offer a recruit then move in are now targeting our roster for transfers. Easier to do since we have yet to prove we have a consistent winning program. We'll have to see about that.</p><p></p><p>Now, as to solutions: get rid of scholarship football, basketball, and baseball. It really is that simple and that difficult. As a taxpayer, I resent having to pay for minor league pro teams and, btw, sure me the "but the associations pay for the sports" stuff. If the pros want experienced players, let them run their own minor leagues. But this won't happen until - and it is coming - Congress intervenes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="takethepoints, post: 971476, member: 265"] I think this is right. A "luxury tax" a la NBA would do a lot to even things out money-wise. But that isn't likely, given the way the NCAA is set up. The fly in the ointment here is that even teams with loaded of money often have a hard time maintaining their win levels (Clemson). And some schools with very little money (comparatively) suddenly show up in the top 20 (Oregon State, TCU last year). Coaching means a lot and even the transfer portal doesn't necessary have a deciding effect. It is true that some schools who used to wait for Tech to offer a recruit then move in are now targeting our roster for transfers. Easier to do since we have yet to prove we have a consistent winning program. We'll have to see about that. Now, as to solutions: get rid of scholarship football, basketball, and baseball. It really is that simple and that difficult. As a taxpayer, I resent having to pay for minor league pro teams and, btw, sure me the "but the associations pay for the sports" stuff. If the pros want experienced players, let them run their own minor leagues. But this won't happen until - and it is coming - Congress intervenes. [/QUOTE]
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Which of these 3 has mess up college football
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