We are headed to a pro college league. This is not a new thought, it's just clearer with the NIL and this latest bout of realignment.
Imo, here's what NIL means in case you're not keeping up. It means that there will be teams that field and have an entire two strings deep of paid athletes. Alabama, Texas and others will be fielding million dollar qb's and entire crews of $100k+ first stringers. And the other 3-4 star kids who would have gone to their second or third choice schools just so they could play, will instead opt to sign at wherever they're going to get paid best, even if it means sitting on the sideline for a long while. And who could blame them? Most of them won't have a pro career anyway, and getting top dollar in college will become a priority. It's not wrong for them to do so, it's economics and should be expected given the fact that NIL is the rule of the day. I don't support or agree with NIL, but it's there and so the market has just changed drastically.
This of course is just the beginning and the competitive landscape will be drastically different in 5-7 years, where the chasm between the haves and have nots will grow even wider. Small to medium schools will have some NIL, but they just won't be able to keep up. It will be large high value schools and everyone else. The only hope for them is that NIL is reined in somehow.
So what's that mean for us? It means that this next step is likely temporary, even more so if we somehow land in a P5. And if in a P5, there's a good chance that we wouldn't be able to field a team that could compete with the large state schools once NIL is in full swing in 3-5ish years anyway. Of course there will always be the small guys that make a good run every now and again, or a high dollar athlete that goes to a small school, but it will be the exception not the rule.
So how does a BU or TCU keep up, or even stay in, with the impending college pro league? And this is just my take, what do you think NIL means for schools like BU?
Edit: And for those of you predicting a weak UT in the SEC, I just don't think you're realizing how much things have changed. I'm betting that with NIL, UT will be towards the top of the SEC in short order because they will have player endorsements that compete with bama - all the way down their roster.
Imo, here's what NIL means in case you're not keeping up. It means that there will be teams that field and have an entire two strings deep of paid athletes. Alabama, Texas and others will be fielding million dollar qb's and entire crews of $100k+ first stringers. And the other 3-4 star kids who would have gone to their second or third choice schools just so they could play, will instead opt to sign at wherever they're going to get paid best, even if it means sitting on the sideline for a long while. And who could blame them? Most of them won't have a pro career anyway, and getting top dollar in college will become a priority. It's not wrong for them to do so, it's economics and should be expected given the fact that NIL is the rule of the day. I don't support or agree with NIL, but it's there and so the market has just changed drastically.
This of course is just the beginning and the competitive landscape will be drastically different in 5-7 years, where the chasm between the haves and have nots will grow even wider. Small to medium schools will have some NIL, but they just won't be able to keep up. It will be large high value schools and everyone else. The only hope for them is that NIL is reined in somehow.
So what's that mean for us? It means that this next step is likely temporary, even more so if we somehow land in a P5. And if in a P5, there's a good chance that we wouldn't be able to field a team that could compete with the large state schools once NIL is in full swing in 3-5ish years anyway. Of course there will always be the small guys that make a good run every now and again, or a high dollar athlete that goes to a small school, but it will be the exception not the rule.
So how does a BU or TCU keep up, or even stay in, with the impending college pro league? And this is just my take, what do you think NIL means for schools like BU?
Edit: And for those of you predicting a weak UT in the SEC, I just don't think you're realizing how much things have changed. I'm betting that with NIL, UT will be towards the top of the SEC in short order because they will have player endorsements that compete with bama - all the way down their roster.