Megafootballfauna! |
Athletes making money from their name, image and likeness (NIL) has been in place for a couple of years now, as schools figure out how to use it as recruiting tool and oversee it without calling their new assistant athletic directors “bagmen.” If anything, NIL has been bolstered by the other two components.
When the Southeastern Conference poached Texas and Oklahoma from the Big 12, and the Big Ten countered by grabbing Southern Cal and UCLA from the Pac-12, it kicked off a round of realignment that exposed the lie that major college athletics’ primary concern is the welfare of the athletes, unless frequent-flier miles and Marriott points are now considered benefits.
The Big Ten is about to be an 18-team coast-to-coast league, the SEC a 16-team outfit that stretches from central Texas and Oklahoma to Florida. The two wealthiest conferences, in terms of TV contracts and interest, are about to become even wealthier once the upcoming round of TV negotiations is complete. Meanwhile, the Big 12 is up to 16 schools after cherry-picking from the underserved and then snatching a quartet of Pac-12 refugees, and the last-at-the-table ACC is also up to 18 schools and bi-coastal.
Couple that movement with the 12-team playoff, and it makes for a dandy cash grab. The four-team playoff structure was worth $400-600 million per year for the decade it was in place. The new, expanded setup is estimated to be worth approximately $1-1.2 billion per year. Under the old system, conferences received $6 million for each semifinalist and $4 million for each team in one of the rotating non-playoff major bowls (Cotton, Fiesta, Peach). Expect those payouts to increase substantially under the 12-team field.
All that lettuce, and still there are plenty of folks who want to restrict the kids who attract the eyeballs and cash. At this point, arguments for the traditional model of college athletics should come with a laugh track, though it does provide a valuable lesson for the kids: that the adults who control the means and venues and distribution won’t cede a dime without a hissy fit, and they won’t hesitate to use any tool in the shed.
Education and nostalgia and sports can make for darn fine cover, which Eugene Debs and Mother Jones and Marvin Miller would recognize. But we digress.
The combination of conference consolidation and the fact that an actual playoff field was imminent made this season feel a little like a missed opportunity. Consider what the 12-team field would have looked like this season: three SEC teams (Alabama, Georgia, Missouri), three Big Ten teams (Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State), two from the Pac-12 (Washington, Oregon), champs from the Big 12 (Texas) and ACC (Florida State), and the Group of Five choice (Liberty). Argue among yourselves about the 12th team.
A potentially terrific tournament strictly from a competitive standpoint, but also a fairly broad representation of the sport. Future tournaments may be similarly competitive but something will be lost.
One of the beauties of college football, of college athletics in general, is its unique fingerprint, both individually and regionally. It’s what separates the game from the more homogenized NFL.
Going forward, programs will still have their own personalities and loyalties, but consolidation and the elimination of an entire conference (RIP, Pac-12) erodes some of the individuality. When programs are grouped under increasingly large umbrellas, it begins to feel like watching branch offices of Amazon and Microsoft rather than pure athletic competition (if the West Coast programs are somehow cowed into an Iowafication of their style of play, the Big Ten offices will receive a sternly worded letter; just sayin’).
Now, if all this nudges college football toward separate governance and scheduling and permits athletic departments to return to more regionally sensible schedules for all other sports, then the upheaval may have been worth it. Good or bad in total no one can say. Though the fact that in this revolution no skulls were cracked probably counts as a win.
Well said. A comment from the old man with lawn sprinklers: what of the notion of actual higher education here? This cirque du silly with its bazillion dollars, likeness payouts, cross-country away schedules, season lengthening, and a bevy of decisions always led by the quest for green and never by the Dean seems to have strayed so far away from original intent without anyone raising their hand to question the “all about coulda, not shoulda” results here. At what point is top level varsity football now the equivalent of having a U2 residence every fall to bring fanfare and road trippers and dizzy up the campus? (And have some weird national battle of the bands competition; the analogy only goes so far.) It has nothing to do with education, everything to do with entertainment. Which does work to enroll more actual students. What percentage of NIL players are going to class, earning credits, and graduating? It’s been leaning that way for a generation or more, but at what point do the flood gates open and this is a higher ed as a more fun minor leagues? I’ve bitched about this before here. And I remain irrelevant to the point. It just seems so odd to me.
ReplyDeleteNBTYRSD.
I predict the 12 team playoff yields lots of blowouts.
ReplyDeleteIt took me a second to decode Whit’s acronym, but I got there.
It’s been raining here for about a week straight. Not great for my tomatoes.
DeleteToo much rain chaps my tomatoes, too.
ReplyDeletewhit’s acronym contains the secret to successful tomato husbandry
ReplyDeletejust took a gummy as we headed into epcot. i should liveblog.
ReplyDeleteDo these realignments impact all sports or just football? If you play football at Ohio State or basketball at UNC, you might envision a post-graduate career in sports as a player or coach, and you might not mind having to travel all over the country. But maybe not so much if you swim or wrestle for fun, and want to go to med school when you graduate.
ReplyDeleteI recall a time when colleges didn't want a football playoff because it would add too many games to the schedule and thus prevent the kids from learning. I guess that's out the window.
Did Dallas not think they would have to play defense today?
ReplyDeleteHey Z, conference realignment affects and includes everybody. I have no knowledge of future conference scheduling, but I suspect they'll do their best to keep it regional aside from football, and limit huge trips even for football.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to think you won't see mid-season Penn State-UCLA volleyball matches or Oklahoma-Florida baseball. Everybody comes together for conference tournaments. But hey, what do I know?
As for the Cowboys, this kind of dyspepsia with Jerrah Jones and Mike McCarthy is quite the spectacle.
I don't see how kids from former Pac 10 schools won't spend a ton of time in airplanes.
ReplyDeleteRob, how we doing, buddyyyyyyyy?
ReplyDeletez, a very prominent sports and dipshittery blog posted extensively about the subject of your inquiry. you should check it out: https://gheorghe77.blogspot.com/2023/05/gheorghe-realigns-modest-and-pointless.html?m=1
ReplyDeletefeelin’ good, whit
Detroit is wrecking people tonight. Lordy, they’re hittin’.
ReplyDelete