David Smoke's interview with Drayton McLane

3,932 Views | 36 Replies | Last: 19 days ago by 5th&Bagby
TexasScientist
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“It is impossible to get a man to understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding.” ~ Upton Sinclair
Delmar 2.0
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This interview was done a couple months ago, right around Christmas FYI.
TexasScientist
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Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.
“It is impossible to get a man to understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding.” ~ Upton Sinclair
blackie
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TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

Don't think you should include SMU in that list of " schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete". SMU just picked up $50 Million from one donor and the expectation is that another $50 Million and more will come before the year is out. SMU has the donors and they have the will to stay right there with the bigger dogs in this fiasco. This money was expressly targeted to NIL efforts.
Youre a clown
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Exactly right. The NIL thing has been the best thing that could possibly happen to SMU, lol. I said it in another thread and made a couple people upset, but Baylor should explore moving to a lesser conference that is more financially sustainable, and one where we can actually compete at a high level
EatMoreSalmon
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blackie said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

Don't think you should include SMU in that list of " schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete". SMU just picked up $50 Million from one donor and the expectation is that another $50 Million and more will come before the year is out. SMU has the donors and they have the will to stay right there with the bigger dogs in this fiasco. This money was expressly targeted to NIL efforts.


Will they start paying the fans to stay with the big dogs?
Big12Fan2024
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Why is he grouping SMU with us. I recall seeing them in the CFP in 2024 and almost making this past season. They didn't make the NCAA basketball tournament last year but they're going to be in this year.

SMU and Baylor appear to be on two different trajectories with athletic programs and unfortunately we're not on the correct one.
Danielsjackson114
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The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors
T-REX
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Danielsjackson114 said:

The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors
**** em. Real fans dont turn their back on their team because their god got dethroned
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perrynative
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Smart folks do not waste their money.
Danielsjackson114
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**** em????? I wish

We need the money, bro. We need donors now more than ever...
TexasScientist
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blackie said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

Don't think you should include SMU in that list of " schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete". SMU just picked up $50 Million from one donor and the expectation is that another $50 Million and more will come before the year is out. SMU has the donors and they have the will to stay right there with the bigger dogs in this fiasco. This money was expressly targeted to NIL efforts.

Oh, I agree SMU is in a better situation. McLane is the one that mentioned Baylor, TCU and SMU. My son is at SMU now, and they seem to be doing fine.
“It is impossible to get a man to understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding.” ~ Upton Sinclair
TexasScientist
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Big12Fan2024 said:

Why is he grouping SMU with us. I recall seeing them in the CFP in 2024 and almost making this past season. They didn't make the NCAA basketball tournament last year but they're going to be in this year.

SMU and Baylor appear to be on two different trajectories with athletic programs and unfortunately we're not on the correct one.

I agree, SMU is in a better situation. They could easily supplant Baylor in any future realignment.
“It is impossible to get a man to understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding.” ~ Upton Sinclair
TexasScientist
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Exactly.
“It is impossible to get a man to understand something if his livelihood depends on him not understanding.” ~ Upton Sinclair
T-REX
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Danielsjackson114 said:

**** em????? I wish

We need the money, bro. We need donors now more than ever...
thats the thing. They havent been giving. So they arent donors anymore until they get over themselves and decide they want their team to win and start being donors again
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DallasBear9902
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SMU is in a better spot, but they still face an existential crisis. I have a degree from the school, so I'm not knocking it. Just a statement of fact.

Recall, they had to forgo conference revenue go 9 years to get into the ACC. That is not good for their long term prospects on conference realignment. And even SMU doesn't have deep enough pockets for that to continue into perpetuity.

The reality is that Notre Dame and perhaps USC and Miami are the only private schools with the resources to play this game long term. And even USC's finances are under pressure.
Bearknuckle
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I took a different read from Drayton than many of you did, apparently. I understood him to mean that:
  • state (flagship) schools have both big alumni bases and legislative backing
  • so they're likely the only 'guaranteed' survivors of realignment
  • other schools could be among that number, they're just not the same level of guarantee
  • Baylor BMDs have largely wanted to wait until they know there are contractual protections on their NIL gifts (cf Troy Aikman's angst at UCLA)
So while I do agree his overall tone was pretty gloomy, I don't think he was signaling that Baylor is inevitably doomed to relegation (but based from his statements I think that he sees that as a possibility).

As for his discussion of a new generation of BMDs who will step - that he didn't mention anyone by name is neither surprising nor worrying to me. It serves no one for him to try to publicly pressure other people into giving massive amounts of money, so why would he have done so? Per my last bullet point, I think he was signaling that if/when regulation of the CFB labor market actually takes place, Baylor BMDs will be very comfortable contributing enough to make the Bears truly competitive.


Mitch Blood Green
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T-REX said:

Danielsjackson114 said:

The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors

**** em. Real fans dont turn their back on their team because their god got dethroned

It wasn't because our God got dethroned. It was because our Board dethroned our god. To put it another way, if my brother cheats on his wife, that's my brother. If my brother cheats with my wife, forgiveness won't come as easily.
Jacques Strap
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DallasBear9902 said:

SMU is in a better spot, but they still face an existential crisis. I have a degree from the school, so I'm not knocking it. Just a statement of fact.

Recall, they had to forgo conference revenue go 9 years to get into the ACC. That is not good for their long term prospects on conference realignment. And even SMU doesn't have deep enough pockets for that to continue into perpetuity.

The reality is that Notre Dame and perhaps USC and Miami are the only private schools with the resources to play this game long term. And even USC's finances are under pressure.

I would add Stanford to the list.

If Stanford BMDs decide they want to play their donor base is perhaps larger than all of the BMD in the SEC combined. Sleeping Giant.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_universities_by_number_of_billionaire_alumni
guadalupeoso
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Mitch Blood Green said:

T-REX said:

Danielsjackson114 said:

The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors

**** em. Real fans dont turn their back on their team because their god got dethroned

It wasn't because our God got dethroned. It was because our Board dethroned our god. To put it another way, if my brother cheats on his wife, that's my brother. If my brother cheats with my wife, forgiveness won't come as easily.

This is a fallacy because it implies that there is a way outside of the Board that the "god" could have been dethroned. Only the board could fire him - which they did. Your brother (depending on how much money he makes or good looking he is) has a whole ocean of people he can cheat with. Not the same thing at all.

I attended Baylor University, not Briles University. Regardless of what my feelings are or aren't about Briles or the way that situation was handled, cutting off your nose to spite your face is just stupid.
5th&Bagby
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TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.
Mitch Blood Green
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guadalupeoso said:

Mitch Blood Green said:

T-REX said:

Danielsjackson114 said:

The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors

**** em. Real fans dont turn their back on their team because their god got dethroned

It wasn't because our God got dethroned. It was because our Board dethroned our god. To put it another way, if my brother cheats on his wife, that's my brother. If my brother cheats with my wife, forgiveness won't come as easily.

This is a fallacy because it implies that there is a way outside of the Board that the "god" could have been dethroned. Only the board could fire him - which they did. Your brother (depending on how much money he makes or good looking he is) has a whole ocean of people he can cheat with. Not the same thing at all.

I attended Baylor University, not Briles University. Regardless of what my feelings are or aren't about Briles or the way that situation was handled, cutting off your nose to spite your face is just stupid.



No No No.

Let me help you.

Do you know why companies have HR, Sexual Harassment and Racial discrimination policies?

It's not for the benefit of the employee. It's to protect the company. Baylor had several fundamental failures that led to Briles being scapegoated.

1. HR is responsible for establishing guardrails that protect the company. The guardrails establish things like pay scale (dingleberry 1 pays $12-$14/ hour) and the process to adjudicate conflict. (Typically via employee handbook)

2. HR helps establish the qualifications for jobs.

HR typically receives its authority from senior management and the board of directors. (Stay with me)

Our Board of Directors failed us in two ways.

1. They failed to establish a title IX office, which like HR would have protected the university by establishing guidelines for handling sexual assault cases.

2. Our Board failed us by hiring Ken Starr who didn't have the proper qualifications to be president of a university. Even if the board didn't understand the importance of a title IX compliance a properly qualified university president would have.

So, the people responsible (board of regents) failed at basic university governance. So, their answer is to fire the coach? That's scapegoating.

And there is little evidence that they've learned their lesson. So, why would an alum who made millions trust the university who continues to hire good guys with questionable qualifications?

You're right, it's not Briles University. It's Baylor University and its board looks no more competent than it was 15 years ago.
guadalupeoso
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The Board may be at fault, but your analogy doesn't work. You can say, "I think the board is bad and should not have fired Briles." But you can't say, "I'm not upset that Briles got fired, but I am upset that specifically the board fired Briles." Because the board is the only one who could fire him. Similar to "I'm not upset that my brother cheated, I'm upset he cheated with my wife." Implies that it would be less bad if he cheated with someone else - the analogy implies then firing of Briles would have been less bad if someone else (not the board) had done it. It just doesn't work.

But again, you're making my point. "I hate the board so I'm not going to support the university" creates a circular problem for folks who take that position. I don't know of a university that can improve without the support of its alumni. To use your marital analogies - I can't expect my marriage to improve if I only support it once my wife takes my position on all disputes. I have to support my marriage in spite of our differences, in hopes that the relationship will strengthen and improve. To do otherwise is self-defeating and I'll never be satisfied with that relationship. In failing to support the university because of the board, you aren't showing disapproval of the board, but rather showing that you actually don't care about the university (and I don't necessarily mean "you", specifically - for all I knows you are an ardent supporter - I just mean those that take that position) .
Mitch Blood Green
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guadalupeoso said:

The Board may be at fault, but your analogy doesn't work. You can say, "I think the board is bad and should not have fired Briles." But you can't say, "I'm not upset that Briles got fired, but I am upset that specifically the board fired Briles." Because the board is the only one who could fire him. Similar to "I'm not upset that my brother cheated, I'm upset he cheated with my wife." Implies that it would be less bad if he cheated with someone else - the analogy implies then firing of Briles would have been less bad if someone else (not the board) had done it. It just doesn't work.

But again, you're making my point. "I hate the board so I'm not going to support the university" creates a circular problem for folks who take that position. I don't know of a university that can improve without the support of its alumni. To use your marital analogies - I can't expect my marriage to improve if I only support it once my wife takes my position on all disputes. I have to support my marriage in spite of our differences, in hopes that the relationship will strengthen and improve. To do otherwise is self-defeating and I'll never be satisfied with that relationship. In failing to support the university because of the board, you aren't showing disapproval of the board, but rather showing that you actually don't care about the university (and I don't necessarily mean "you", specifically - for all I knows you are an ardent supporter - I just mean those that take that position) .


It's a straight forward question. Had the board done proper governance would the Briles situation have happened?

You don't seem to grasp governance. Its purpose is not to stop bad things from happened. Life isn't predictable. It's to set up guidelines on how you deal with bad things when they happen.
Jacques Strap
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5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.

He didn't say the 30 largest schools have infinite funds, he said they have more funds and can pay at a higher level.

Paraphrasing Mr. McLane a bit here but he basically said BU cannot afford to pay players as much as the 30 biggest schools can. Schools such as LSU, Texas, A&M (Possibly others) are approaching $40 million roster payrolls in 2026. BU allegedly paid $17 million in 2025. You can disagree with him, he is after all offering an opinion, but I tend to agree with him that the donor base of those bigger schools have deeper pockets than the BU donor base.

Drayton McLane wants system changes such as a salary cap & free agency that have a viable enforcement mechanism (good luck with enforcement). I don't blame him.

5th&Bagby
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Jacques Strap said:

He didn't say the 30 largest schools have infinite funds, he said they have more funds and can pay at a higher level.

You can disagree with him, he is after all offering an opinion, but I tend to agree with him that the donor base of those bigger schools have deeper pockets than the BU donor base.



Name the states. I just gave you two in our conference that ran deficits. And they're making cut backs.

This chicken little s--- is hilarious. You're taking him literally. Quit trying to make it sound like I'm disagreeing with him. He wasn't I'm giving you information that tells you long-term that the trendline is going south. If you think I'm wrong, to talk to the bond financiers that prop up these states.

We are talking about state governments. They have trouble funding roads, schools, capital projects few are consistently successful. In the short run? Yeah, a few can write $40 million checks. But the signs of distress are there for the taking and with the exception of only a few states, most are looking to cap their spending.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/big12/2025/12/02/colorado-athletics-budget-deficit-deion-sanders-colorado-football-contract-nil/87560914007/

https://www.si.com/college/arizona/desiree-reed-francois-wildcats-football-brent-brennan
Aberzombie1892
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5th&Bagby said:

Jacques Strap said:

He didn't say the 30 largest schools have infinite funds, he said they have more funds and can pay at a higher level.

You can disagree with him, he is after all offering an opinion, but I tend to agree with him that the donor base of those bigger schools have deeper pockets than the BU donor base.



Name the states. I just gave you two in our conference that ran deficits. And they're making cut backs.

This chicken little s--- is hilarious. You're taking him literally. Quit trying to make it sound like I'm disagreeing with him. He wasn't I'm giving you information that tells you long-term that the trendline is going south. If you think I'm wrong, to talk to the bond financiers that prop up these states.

We are talking about state governments. They have trouble funding roads, schools, capital projects few are consistently successful. In the short run? Yeah, a few can write $40 million checks. But the signs of distress are there for the taking and with the exception of only a few states, most are looking to cap their spending.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/big12/2025/12/02/colorado-athletics-budget-deficit-deion-sanders-colorado-football-contract-nil/87560914007/

https://www.si.com/college/arizona/desiree-reed-francois-wildcats-football-brent-brennan

Is this response in regard to the quoted comment by Jacques? It's not clear that it is since the quote says, to paraphrase, that the 30 largest state schools can pay at a higher level, however this comment is talking about Colorado or Arizona as if they are in that group. Sure, by "largest" he may have intended to mean wealthiest from an athletics perspective, but that doesn't invalidate the overarching point.

From a substance perspective, much if not most of the $40 million that such schools spend is not coming from taxpayers, so it's similarly unclear what the point was with referring to state government budgets. If there has been a report that a state government is fronting all or virtually all of the $40M, please share so that we can all be brought up to speed.
guadalupeoso
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Mitch Blood Green said:

guadalupeoso said:

The Board may be at fault, but your analogy doesn't work. You can say, "I think the board is bad and should not have fired Briles." But you can't say, "I'm not upset that Briles got fired, but I am upset that specifically the board fired Briles." Because the board is the only one who could fire him. Similar to "I'm not upset that my brother cheated, I'm upset he cheated with my wife." Implies that it would be less bad if he cheated with someone else - the analogy implies then firing of Briles would have been less bad if someone else (not the board) had done it. It just doesn't work.

But again, you're making my point. "I hate the board so I'm not going to support the university" creates a circular problem for folks who take that position. I don't know of a university that can improve without the support of its alumni. To use your marital analogies - I can't expect my marriage to improve if I only support it once my wife takes my position on all disputes. I have to support my marriage in spite of our differences, in hopes that the relationship will strengthen and improve. To do otherwise is self-defeating and I'll never be satisfied with that relationship. In failing to support the university because of the board, you aren't showing disapproval of the board, but rather showing that you actually don't care about the university (and I don't necessarily mean "you", specifically - for all I knows you are an ardent supporter - I just mean those that take that position) .


It's a straight forward question. Had the board done proper governance would the Briles situation have happened?

You don't seem to grasp governance. Its purpose is not to stop bad things from happened. Life isn't predictable. It's to set up guidelines on how you deal with bad things when they happen.

I understand the point you are making. But that is not the point that your analogy about the cheating brother was making. I don't think you understand literary devices and analogy. You have moved the goalpost on what you're saying.

And to answer your question: yes, I think it would have. The board's improper governance compounded the problem, but I think the problem would have still existed. Might have been dealt with differently.

My point remains - whether you think the board improperly governed or not - allowing that to be a barrier to your support of the university means you just don't want to support the university.
5th&Bagby
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Aberzombie1892 said:



From a substance perspective, much if not most of the $40 million that such schools spend is not coming from taxpayers, so it's similarly unclear what the point was with referring to state government budgets. If there has been a report that a state government is fronting all or virtually all of the $40M, please share so that we can all be brought up to speed.

Name those 30 big state schools? Colorado and Arizona are growing, if they don't have the money for it, then it isn't Mississippi, South Carolina or Arkansas, they won't have it either. I'll wait here for you to provide a list of 30 state universities spending $40 million each. Please share so that we can be brought up to speed, LOL.

Ive given you evidence and data of two of the more prosperous states in the US and you're pointing to UFOs and scary stories.

How many state U's are spending $40 mil???


5th&Bagby
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Aberzombie1892 said:



From a substance perspective, much if not most of the $40 million that such schools spend is not coming from taxpayers, so it's similarly unclear what the point was with referring to state government budgets. If there has been a report that a state government is fronting all or virtually all of the $40M, please share so that we can all be brought up to speed.

That I'm explaining this is sort of the entire point. Every dollar spent in the name of a state university is 'approved' in a budget, regardless of source. And that's because of legal jurisdiction and tax treatment, and it runs through the Board. If you don't understand that, not sure what to tell you.

https://www.nj.com/rutgers/2026/01/rutgers-athletics-deficit-hit-record-78-million-in-2024-25-new-ad-says-its-got-to-get-better.html

State Univs have large alumni groups, but expecting $40 mil/year from donors just for a football budget to athletes staying one year is unrealistic. I've got no problem with Baylor dialing back the investment. But the suggestion that the states will continue at the current rate of spend is unrealistic.

You took Drayton literally, when he means figuratively we don't want to be in a toe-to-toe footrace with governments. I'm simply pointing out the facts that state governments are having problems, too. In five years, the landscape will probably look very different. You're just seeing three bubbles pop at once. The player market is now free market, that's changed the facilities and coaching market.


montypython
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Mitch Blood Green said:

guadalupeoso said:

Mitch Blood Green said:

T-REX said:

Danielsjackson114 said:

The Briles' debacle then Mack Rhoades have completely alienated most of our donors

**** em. Real fans dont turn their back on their team because their god got dethroned

It wasn't because our God got dethroned. It was because our Board dethroned our god. To put it another way, if my brother cheats on his wife, that's my brother. If my brother cheats with my wife, forgiveness won't come as easily.

This is a fallacy because it implies that there is a way outside of the Board that the "god" could have been dethroned. Only the board could fire him - which they did. Your brother (depending on how much money he makes or good looking he is) has a whole ocean of people he can cheat with. Not the same thing at all.

I attended Baylor University, not Briles University. Regardless of what my feelings are or aren't about Briles or the way that situation was handled, cutting off your nose to spite your face is just stupid.



2. Our Board failed us by hiring Ken Starr who didn't have the proper qualifications to be president of a university.

I agree with the spirit of your post but I am going to single out your 2nd point. Without the benefit of hindsight, in what way did he lack qualifications? Were you on the hiring committee?

If you are looking at resumes of people to hire as your new college president, a Law School Dean is a common choice because it has historically been a good choice. In fact, there have been no less than 60 law school deans hired as school presidents over the past 70-80 years*.

The reason is that a law school dean is a multifaceted leader who acts as a bridge between the law school and the broader community of the university. They perform academic oversight, administrative management, manage budgets and develop community engagement to propel the law school towards its goals. Starr was Law School Dean at Pepperdine for 6 years. When he arrived at Pepperdine, the law school was ranked 99th in the country and 55th when he left (USNWR).

* https://www.spiveyconsulting.com/blog-post/law-school-deans-who-became-university-presidents
TexasScientist
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5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.

When he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor, I don't think he is saying they have infinite funds. I think what he is saying is that their size, being 30 or so large state universities, in scope of budget, stadiums, and alumni donor base provides an very large access to funding gap that smaller schools like Baylor can't bridge.
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5th&Bagby
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TexasScientist said:

5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.

When he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor, I don't think he is saying they have infinite funds. I think what he is saying is that their size, being 30 or so large state universities, in scope of budget, stadiums, and alumni donor base provides an very large access to funding gap that smaller schools like Baylor can't bridge.

Like I said, if that were true, schools like Kansas wouldn't show a deficit. I hate the evil state school as much as anyone but state schools have constituents that will cut their athletic programs if it means a fight for survival. And right now, there are schools facing serious shortfalls that won't be made up. More to the point, the sport won't survive without some measure of parity. Fans won't watch rigged, pay-for-play games and shell out big bucks.

https://www.kcur.org/sports/2026-03-03/ku-pay-athletes-general-fund-faculty-union-pay-negotiation-girod-kansas

It should be easy to name these 30 schools, but no one seems to be able to do it.
DallasBear9902
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5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.

When he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor, I don't think he is saying they have infinite funds. I think what he is saying is that their size, being 30 or so large state universities, in scope of budget, stadiums, and alumni donor base provides an very large access to funding gap that smaller schools like Baylor can't bridge.

Like I said, if that were true, schools like Kansas wouldn't show a deficit. I hate the evil state school as much as anyone but state schools have constituents that will cut their athletic programs if it means a fight for survival. And right now, there are schools facing serious shortfalls that won't be made up. More to the point, the sport won't survive without some measure of parity. Fans won't watch rigged, pay-for-play games and shell out big bucks.

https://www.kcur.org/sports/2026-03-03/ku-pay-athletes-general-fund-faculty-union-pay-negotiation-girod-kansas

It should be easy to name these 30 schools, but no one seems to be able to do it.



KU running a $15mm deficit on $150mm operating budget and getting middling results is not the same thing as Ohio State running a $40mm deficit on a $280mm operating budget and having a national championship in football to show for it. My guess is that every single school in the country would gladly accept $40mm operating deficit in the athletics department in exchange for national titles knowing that they are going to make up the cash one way or another (donations, raising the profile of the school, etc).

One of those two schools is in a theoretically sustainable situation, the other (Kansas) is not. The disparity in operating budget reflects the reality that Ohio State (in its own capacity and through the Big Ten) can monetize and leverage itself to outspend the competition. That Kansas and Ohio State are both running deficits is a data point, but it only scratches the surface of what is going on.

I don't know if the number is 20 or 30 or 40 schools that can afford to compete at the highest level, but it is clear that the list of schools that can make the cut are overwhelmingly large, public schools.

And yes, fans and alumni of those schools will happily pay to watch a pay to play scheme and they won't care about the damage done to the smaller schools.
Aberzombie1892
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5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

5th&Bagby said:

TexasScientist said:

Right. I heard it then, and intended to post about it, but just now got around to it. If you listen closely, it's pretty clear Baylor doesn't have the alumni support or financial strength to compete in the upper tier of the Big 12. 3:06 - 8:45 of the interview is particularly interesting. His comments essentially are there has to be a salary cap for schools like Baylor, TCU and SMU to compete. As it is now he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor. It's noteworthy that he didn't say, when given the opportunity, that the major donor alumni, like McLane, Hurd family or Fudge family would provide enough money to make sure Baylor would have enough to compete.

This isn't an accurate characterization so far as it regards state Universities. Whether that's Drayton's comment or interpretation is not really the point:

There are many factors at play, it will definitely be a bumpy ride, but the assumption that the evil state schools have infinite funds is incorrect.

When he says there are 30 or so large state universities with big stadiums that can afford to play at a higher level than smaller schools like Baylor, I don't think he is saying they have infinite funds. I think what he is saying is that their size, being 30 or so large state universities, in scope of budget, stadiums, and alumni donor base provides an very large access to funding gap that smaller schools like Baylor can't bridge.

Like I said, if that were true, schools like Kansas wouldn't show a deficit. I hate the evil state school as much as anyone but state schools have constituents that will cut their athletic programs if it means a fight for survival. And right now, there are schools facing serious shortfalls that won't be made up. More to the point, the sport won't survive without some measure of parity. Fans won't watch rigged, pay-for-play games and shell out big bucks.

https://www.kcur.org/sports/2026-03-03/ku-pay-athletes-general-fund-faculty-union-pay-negotiation-girod-kansas

It should be easy to name these 30 schools, but no one seems to be able to do it.


Kansas? Seriously?
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