boger2337
Helluva Engineer
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- 3,435
IMO, there have been three seismic shifts in college football in the last 50 years:
1) Integration in the 60s and 70s
2) APR in 2003
3) TV money over last decade
With history unchanged, all three of these crossroads left Georgia Tech with a lesser ability to compete then the prior era (though impact of #1 was for relatively short period of time).
With history changed (staying the SEC), only #3 turns out differently. Most recent difference in conference distribution was approximately $14 million per year. Let's conservatively say that GT would have gotten an additional $50 million over the last decade. Would that mean better facilities, resources, etc? Probably. Would that mean more success/wins? Hard to say. Everyone else is getting that money too, so doesn't automatically equate to a competitive advantage.
I think the big variable is if staying in the SEC would have impacted the actions of the academic side. If the answer is no, then we're probably looking at a program similar to Vanderbilt.
My personal opinion is that it was the right move for the right reasons, though the steady slide from the departure from SEC to Homer Rice's arrival was demoralizing. The success of 1990 probably does not happen in the SEC. I also think the pride we have in the character of student-athletes isn't at the same level (which matters to some, including me).
I agree with all the above, but I do believe that less focus and pride in the academics is okay if it means winning 10 games a year. It's not like we would immediately be Alabama or Louisville in academics. I think we can be solid as a school and have a successful team. Notre dame has done well the past decade. Stanford, florida isn't bad at all. UNC did cheat, but hell we could of too if we were in the SEC lol.
Am I willing to sell my soul to be a blue blood? No.
My first born? Maybe. Hahaha
These all do have less intensive work