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- Feb 1, 2018
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- 17,294
The rich will continue to get rich and richer. The $$$ cap will depend on how much a school can and is willing to spend. Taint was an example of that last year.
This got me to thinking: is Ohio State 2024 the last "Super Team" in college football?
Please explain.I’m Deloitte alumni , I can tell you things will most definitely be in a better place with them providing oversight .
Still a ton of questions of who and how much power each of the bodies will have in this new world though . Stay tuned .
NFL, NBA, MLB all do it. Intercollegiate athletics might pose a challenge but it’s not out of the realm of possibilities that the top 4 conferences become a collectively bargained, commissioner ran college football league.so we still got people thinking...in America...we are going to put a limit on what people can earn huh?
okay...
Couldn’t agree more. OSU wasn’t a super team, they got beat by an 8-4 Michigan team.Best team in the nation…Yes
Super Team? No
Overall you make a great point and it will be interesting to see if the trend continues, but I believe it already started. But I have them as at least a 6 pt. dog to 2022 GA, 2019 LSU, 2020 Bama… Maybe even a TD dog.
They were definitely impressive, but even in the playoffs I don't believe say 2024 Oregon for instance was within a TD of some of the runner-up teams of recent years.
So another pro football league..cool!NFL, NBA, MLB all do it. Intercollegiate athletics might pose a challenge but it’s not out of the realm of possibilities that the top 4 conferences become a collectively bargained, commissioner ran college football league.
Agree. If they cap NIL payments MORE will just be under the table. There are still bags. Not everyone wants to post money for the IRS to seeNIL cap = more $$ under the table = more of a return to pre NIL days imo
All depends if nick satan gets his wayThe past couple months, I've dipped my toe into national CFB coverage with Group Chat Sports (please support by liking and subscribing here).
One thing I've learned: every team, no matter how blue blood, has roster concerns. Powerhouses like Ohio State and Alabama are just as worried about DT depth as we are. Even though it was only a half-decade ago, it feels like a long time since Georgia and Alabama stacked their rosters with five stars on the bench. Now, those blue chippers move on the moment they don't play.
Even guys like Damon Wilson (a five-star EDGE slated to be the top rusher for UGA this year) are being poached by the Missouris of the world. In 2020, it was unthinkable that Vanderbilt could upset Alabama. But when it happened this year, it didn't even feel like a fluke.
This got me to thinking: is Ohio State 2024 the last "Super Team" in college football? That team was the result of blue-blood recruiting, unrestricted NIL, and years of booster frustration caused by Michigan. Now, we're entering a potential salary cap era with third-party enforcement.
There's always the risk of selective enforcement, which happened during the Mark Emmert era. Miami got hit for Benihana's dinners while Emmert's friend Nick Saban paid everyone under the table. But the third-party enforcer (Deloitte) is an almost 200-year-old company with half a million employees across the world. They're unlikely to be as corrupt and incompetent as the NCAA.
Is the parity we experienced in 2024 an aberration, or a sign of things to come?
There is no legal method to cap NIL money. I’ve written this over and over again. Please read Justice Kavanugh’s concurring opinion in the Alston case.NIL cap = more $$ under the table = more of a return to pre NIL days imo
Don’t forget bamas OOS and in state talent which was just as good as the sfla talentMiami keeping more 5 stars home will create more parity than any 3rd party "oversight". Does Ohio State win last year without Jeremiah Smith? Does Alabama win all those championships if they can't raid S. Fla? I think not good sir, I think not