I support it - I happily see all the ads that pop up and even click on some of them due to what they are offering (which ultimately leads more $ to CF). I, however, am not interested in getting recruiting news 2 days early for $130 per year. I have two elementary school kids that take a lot of time and $, so the podcasts, etc are not in my wheelhouse.
I remember it wasn't long ago that the admin and owners pounded the table that CF would never cost the users any $, so that is what I continue to use and believe. I have also never subscribed to CR or 247 either. I just don't need recruiting information that quickly so I can rush out and tell everyone that I know something they don't.
by the way, i never used the term 'significantly improve' - that is your words. I'm really happy that $11/mo is 'nothing' to you. You should therefore be first in line to ramp up our NIL efforts. It's nice to have heavy hitters like you, so please donate more so we are not at the bottom of the athletics donation list.
I have found your Billionaire - ISUCyclones2015 seems to think money is easy to come by and everyone should be giving funds left and right because it is 'nothing' to do so.It’s just proof we’re a cheap fan base and I fully expect to lose people due to NIL regularly until we get a Billionaire Sugar Daddy
Hasn’t talked to any schools yet? Unlikely. If not schools directly, then probably a middleman… which is basically the same.He is gone ladies and gents. Hasnt talked to any schools yet but he is transferring for NIL money.
Take the moral argument out of it, and it's terrible for the college sports media industry. It's good for the players now in the short-term (say next 5-10 years), but college sports and college sports media is in a textbook massive bubble.
The problem is people are viewing NIL and the potential of a CFB superleague from the bottom-up. Is it good for players now? Of course. Is it good for the some of teams at the top right now? Yes. I just don't think it can last.
Look at it from the industry as a whole, then work your way down over the long-term. Attendance and viewership trends have not been good for college sports for years, yet TV media dollars have continued to grow, coach's salaries have exploded, and now with NIL you have what essentially is a new massive operating expense that does not generate new viewership. Between the schools paying directly or indirectly, having to pay admin costs to deal with it, or the diversion of donor dollars from AD operating budgets and capital projects directly to NIL, it's a massive new expense for athletic departments.
And the NIL-driven transfers are more likely to cost customers for the industry as a whole through increased roster turnover and lack of competitive balance. The superleague idea probably does the same. College sports are not competively balanced now. But there's just enough of at least the perception that "my team is in the club" that people watch. That illusion is powerful. When that's gone, it's going to cost the industry customers.
So basically with both of these moves you will have an industry that shrinks overall. That might still be OK for the teams at the top, as they will get a big increase in market share. But we don't really know how that will hold up in the long-term.
But this is textbook industry bubble stuff - Arms race and media race run up expenses that greatly outpace the growth of the customer base and its willigness to pay, have a massive new direct or indirect operating expense that the industry can't valorize (NIL), have the fight for market share drive decisions that shrink the industry as a whole.
Lol so you're against this because you didn't get paid. It was cool for you to have money to buy a race car but kids these days shouldn't get any more than that even if they are much, much more talented.
I bought the racecar with my extra housing money. Which is an illustration that shows scholarship athletes already get everything taken care of and then have excess.Lol so you're against this because you didn't get paid. It was cool for you to have money to buy a race car but kids these days shouldn't get any more than that even if they are much, much more talented.
Nobody should be surprised by this IMO. Tyrese basically told us all when he came to ISU that his plan was to be a one and done player here and then he was going to go pro and get his money. The only change in his plan was that he realized that his game is not quite ready yet to go pro, but he's still going to try to be a "one and done" at ISU and still go get his money however he has to do it.
And I don't blame him one bit. Tyrese has been through more in his life than 99.9% of could even comprehend. Who are we to say he shouldn't do what his best for him, and if he can go get enough money to help his family situation out he should go for it IMO. He's playing by the new rules.... and if you don't like the new rules, that's not Tyrese's fault.
I think greed is the #1 problem in the world, and if all of this greed (at all levels) going on in college athletics ends up destroying it..... so be it. Life's lessons are tough.
Can we get a new thread where we discuss the rumors/whatever around Tyrese transferring and not a huge argument about NIL and transfer rules?
Can we get a new thread where we discuss the rumors/whatever around Tyrese transferring and not a huge argument about NIL and transfer rules?
CFB is not catching up to the NFL as an industry a whole. Not even close. NFL is pulling away and the pace gets bigger all the time. The only reason attendance isn't a complete no-contest is because of stadium capacity and ticket price. The average NFL ticket price last year was like $470. The TV ratings for a mediocre NFL game is better than the best handful of CFB games all season.For cfb the coaches make more, the attendance is higher, and the players careers are on average longer. With the new media deals in place the money is also catching up to the NFL, players should get some of the billions the school are bringing in.
Take the moral argument out of it, and it's terrible for the college sports media industry. It's good for the players now in the short-term (say next 5-10 years), but college sports and college sports media is in a textbook massive bubble.
The problem is people are viewing NIL and the potential of a CFB superleague from the bottom-up. Is it good for players now? Of course. Is it good for the some of teams at the top right now? Yes. I just don't think it can last.
Look at it from the industry as a whole, then work your way down over the long-term. Attendance and viewership trends have not been good for college sports for years, yet TV media dollars have continued to grow, coach's salaries have exploded, and now with NIL you have what essentially is a new massive operating expense that does not generate new viewership. Between the schools paying directly or indirectly, having to pay admin costs to deal with it, or the diversion of donor dollars from AD operating budgets and capital projects directly to NIL, it's a massive new expense for athletic departments.
And the NIL-driven transfers are more likely to cost customers for the industry as a whole through increased roster turnover and lack of competitive balance. The superleague idea probably does the same. College sports are not competively balanced now. But there's just enough of at least the perception that "my team is in the club" that people watch. That illusion is powerful. When that's gone, it's going to cost the industry customers.
So basically with both of these moves you will have an industry that shrinks overall. That might still be OK for the teams at the top, as they will get a big increase in market share. But we don't really know how that will hold up in the long-term.
But this is textbook industry bubble stuff - Arms race and media race run up expenses that greatly outpace the growth of the customer base and its willigness to pay, have a massive new direct or indirect operating expense that the industry can't valorize (NIL), have the fight for market share drive decisions that shrink the industry as a whole.
Agree. This process seems almost as seedy as Adidas and their 'victim' proclaiming partner KU.Hasn’t talked to any schools yet? Unlikely. If not schools directly, then probably a middleman… which is basically the same.
Agree. This process seems almost as seedy as Adidas and their 'victim' proclaiming partner KU.
We'll probably never know, but it would interesting to hear how much Hunter was really 'worth'.
I bought the racecar with my extra housing money. Which is an illustration that shows scholarship athletes already get everything taken care of and then have excess.
I'm not against it because I didn't get paid. Getting paid was the last thing I was thinking about, I just wanted to play football, hang out with my friends and have fun with girls.
If you are worried about getting paid just go pro.
It’s OK that we’re a cheap fan base it’s just our culture. But that same fan base shouldn’t be mad about being poached when we’re not gonna step up and do anything about it.I have found your Billionaire - ISUCyclones2015 seems to think money is easy to come by and everyone should be giving funds left and right because it is 'nothing' to do so.