At this point we are like a third world country trying to move up to first world status, in todays world (real or collegiate) this is almost impossible to do for a variety of reason. It in theory can be done over a 25-30 year span if the right decisions are consistently made and you can come to dominate a particular industry long enough. It helps to have a monopoly or close to it on a needed resource as to keep the first world from playing you against others selling the same commodities.
We have consistently taken a step forward then, blown a foot off with a landmine of our own placement usually. Plus we don't have any commodities (athletically) to barter with that our direct competition doesn't have. The P5 can play us financially off other G5 schools and academically our endowment is so low that even when we are academically ahead, we can't/don't capitalize off of it.
I don't have the answers, but the one thing I am sure of is that continuing to conduct business the we have won't get it done at all. The first step though is funds and that means changing the way we work and going after every dollar from every person we can shake one free from. Doesn't matter if its alumni, businesses, or a guy at the corner bus stop. Identify something we have that they can benefit from, get it in front of them, and when they bite say thank you and truly appreciate them. That means having a detailed and completely open and public plan of how these funds are going to be used and then showing progress on each goal. DO NOT Be vague or dismissive of donors or where their hard earned dollar is going. This also means NEW funds not just shaking the same group down over and over.
This taking money only for the general fund or this particular project is Bullshit!!!
It’s possible, but with Emmert stepping down by next summer, I think there is one more shuffle when the P5 make their move. They will be their own show with around 60 teams. The ship has sailed on us for that show probably, but I am curious what the rest will do. No matter what if we aren’t the top of that heap then we should just shut it down.
I agree that being in the bottom pile isn't worth shutting down over if we're near the top (after all, even some NAIA schools have teams), but I have to imagine the best thing to do would be to scale back dramatically even in that case. It's just not worth the investment because there is no significant return on marketability.
Of course, I don't know that it's possible to scale back our budget at all. I guess we could sell the metal bleachers for scrap.
Correct me if I misheard, but I think Louisiana will now allow high schoolers to make money off their NIL.
Look at this. Boy the NCAA sure crapped the bed when it came to NIL. Stupid, arrogant thinking will get you most every time. They should have gotten out front of this with leadership, setting some guidelines. Once they gave up control for someone else to set the narrative, it was over.
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-ba...tion-increased
I don’t know what the answer is, but all of this is completely going sideways. College is not about an education. A degree no longer means anything outside of the fact that you have to have a piece of paper in order to get a job in many fields. Nearly every job I have held was on the job training and college literally didn’t help me other than being able to show them that paper. Some disciplines at college teach you what you need to be able to go into a field, and those are typically disciplines that a student is in school primarily for that and athletics is secondary if part of the picture. Should college be made more difficult where only those who are truly dedicated to earning a degree will consider it? Should all pro leagues be opened up for kids straight out of high school?
I thought I was on this island all by myself!
I think there are WAY too many degrees (many of them economically useless) being offered with way too much concentration in whatever field they have chosen to pursue, and I include my own degree in there as well. General knowledge, with a lot of it out of the student's comfort zone, would be a better gauge of knowledge than taking a bunch of classes that continue to beat a dead horse long after it has become dust.
I am not sure if someone coming out of high school is ready for the NFL, but perhaps the NFL should consider a minor league program like baseball has to develop their talent.
The USFL could serve that purpose if they wanted it to.
The IRS could fixed all of this real quickly if they wanted too
Disallow all donations to athletic foundations would be a great start
''Don't be a bad dagh..."