Polish Leppy 22
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football does not need to happen
For a number of these athletic departments to stay afloat, college football needs to happen. Even if it is an 8 or 10 game season.
football does not need to happen
This whole thing has been politicized by people on both sides of the aisle. I have zero doubt that Big Pharma was involved in conducting studies of Hydroxychloroquine where they knew it wouldn't succeed, which was the very seriously ill and taking it in a preventative measure. The initial studies chose to totally avoid the most likely benefit of this drug, prescribing it early in the course of the illness. They've branded this cheap drug as a failure so that much more expensive treatments will be prescribed instead. Doctors in the US have been potentially risking their reputations as they buck what the national media keeps selling.
The Newsweek article is from Harvey A. Risch, MD, PhD , Professor of Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The key to defeating COVID-19 already exists. We need to start using it | Opinion <a href="https://t.co/k1mzaOLhg9">https://t.co/k1mzaOLhg9</a></p>— Newsweek (@Newsweek) <a href="https://twitter.com/Newsweek/status/1287080158244020226?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
I posted this in the “Science” thread. Get ready to hear from a lot of Dr. Risch’s peers in 3...2...1
...They need to pull the plug on college sports for the remainder of the year. I know they don’t want to lose that revenue but the rest of the country has had to deal w/ lost revenue, lost wages, lost jobs, lost lives. Shut it down now.
For a number of these athletic departments to stay afloat, college football needs to happen. Even if it is an 8 or 10 game season.
I enjoyed this post. RepsI'm just wondering if Shawn Crawford can get a 7th year.
I'm just wondering if Shawn Crawford can get a 7th year.
And they would only have themselves to blame in the event it collapses. The revenues have skyrocketed in the last two decades and they spent it all. Sure, they now have facilities with cool pools, arcade rooms, display closets for alt uniforms and barber shops.
They expanded coaching staffs and added new layers to the Athletic Department that didn't exist 20 years ago.
Frankly, the whole thing has been out of control and, as much as we don't like to hear it, runs contrary to the mission of higher education. According to their own statistics, National Champ LSU has just over 31,000 students and the average student graduates with over $26,000 in student debt. That means, in an average year, over $200M of student debt is accumulated on campus. In the latest data released (2018/2019 school year), LSU recorded just over $155M in revenue and $150M in expenses. In the 2004/2005 school year, LSU had a budget of $55M (Their revenue was just over $60M).
So, despite over a 250% increase in revenue, the amount turned over to the general budget of the school remains largely unchanged (at a school with some serious funding issues to boot). If LSU would have spent at half the rate of increase, they could have reduced the 2018/2019 student loan load by nearly 25% and could have potentially weathered a Covid19 storm. You could probably replace LSU with countless other schools and the trend and figures would be nearly the same.
But instead, they pleaded with donors to play in the arms race and treated the money was if this were Monopoly. This was always going blow up. Congress is looking to get involved, you have the threat of player boycotts in the PAC 12 and, at some point, the players were going to be paid (and deservedly so under the current framework). It was a matter of when it was going to blow up, not if.
As far as I am concerned, this a good thing. Perhaps it will keep football for what it was always intended to be and will allow college football to flourish beyond the current path it was on.
Anyone remember our Lady saying they would require on campus for students (locking in $16k year room and board)?
Zero focus on lowering cost anywhere for decades.
<iframe src="https://giphy.com/embed/LPf3apwI9qLOwMxuFc" width="480" height="324" frameBorder="0" class="giphy-embed" allowFullScreen></iframe><p><a href="https://giphy.com/gifs/memecandy-LPf3apwI9qLOwMxuFc"football does not need to happen
And here we go playing politics again. Now another trillion plus relief package being put together and someone on the right side is trying to put a new fbi headquarters in it. I don’t agree on another relief bill that I am going to pay for by working my ass off. I sure as hell don’t agree with this idea. And I am pretty sure the excuse will be but the left tried to do blah blah blah. If you your going to try and help the people than shut the hell up and do the right thing. I don’t care if you are republican or Democrat.
And they would only have themselves to blame in the event it collapses. The revenues have skyrocketed in the last two decades and they spent it all. Sure, they now have facilities with cool pools, arcade rooms, display closets for alt uniforms and barber shops.
They expanded coaching staffs and added new layers to the Athletic Department that didn't exist 20 years ago.
Frankly, the whole thing has been out of control and, as much as we don't like to hear it, runs contrary to the mission of higher education. According to their own statistics, National Champ LSU has just over 31,000 students and the average student graduates with over $26,000 in student debt. That means, in an average year, over $200M of student debt is accumulated on campus. In the latest data released (2018/2019 school year), LSU recorded just over $155M in revenue and $150M in expenses. In the 2004/2005 school year, LSU had a budget of $55M (Their revenue was just over $60M).
So, despite over a 250% increase in revenue, the amount turned over to the general budget of the school remains largely unchanged (at a school with some serious funding issues to boot). If LSU would have spent at half the rate of increase, they could have reduced the 2018/2019 student loan load by nearly 25% and could have potentially weathered a Covid19 storm. You could probably replace LSU with countless other schools and the trend and figures would be nearly the same.
But instead, they pleaded with donors to play in the arms race and treated the money was if this were Monopoly. This was always going blow up. Congress is looking to get involved, you have the threat of player boycotts in the PAC 12 and, at some point, the players were going to be paid (and deservedly so under the current framework). It was a matter of when it was going to blow up, not if.
As far as I am concerned, this a good thing. Perhaps it will keep football for what it was always intended to be and will allow college football to flourish beyond the current path it was on.
And they would only have themselves to blame in the event it collapses. The revenues have skyrocketed in the last two decades and they spent it all. Sure, they now have facilities with cool pools, arcade rooms, display closets for alt uniforms and barber shops.
They expanded coaching staffs and added new layers to the Athletic Department that didn't exist 20 years ago.
Frankly, the whole thing has been out of control and, as much as we don't like to hear it, runs contrary to the mission of higher education. According to their own statistics, National Champ LSU has just over 31,000 students and the average student graduates with over $26,000 in student debt. That means, in an average year, over $200M of student debt is accumulated on campus. In the latest data released (2018/2019 school year), LSU recorded just over $155M in revenue and $150M in expenses. In the 2004/2005 school year, LSU had a budget of $55M (Their revenue was just over $60M).
So, despite over a 250% increase in revenue, the amount turned over to the general budget of the school remains largely unchanged (at a school with some serious funding issues to boot). If LSU would have spent at half the rate of increase, they could have reduced the 2018/2019 student loan load by nearly 25% and could have potentially weathered a Covid19 storm. You could probably replace LSU with countless other schools and the trend and figures would be nearly the same.
But instead, they pleaded with donors to play in the arms race and treated the money was if this were Monopoly. This was always going blow up. Congress is looking to get involved, you have the threat of player boycotts in the PAC 12 and, at some point, the players were going to be paid (and deservedly so under the current framework). It was a matter of when it was going to blow up, not if.
As far as I am concerned, this a good thing. Perhaps it will keep football for what it was always intended to be and will allow college football to flourish beyond the current path it was on.
I know it may be a little premature, but early indications are Texas, Arizona, and Florida are past their peak. Georgia, Alabama, and Louisiana may have peaked. The Carolinas and California may have approached it as well. Looks like Tennessee and Mississippi are still struggling to control the outbreak.
The SEC heard football was in jeopardy and decided to get their act together.
set a record for deaths beating the previous record, the day before
https://www.tampabay.com/news/healt...ore-than-200-coronavirus-deaths-a-new-record/
Tennessee high schools are playing football starting Aug 21st. Regular schedule. Start practice immediately.
Good for Tennessee! I know I'm insensitive to the political virus. Watch how numbers decline on November 3rd through the 10th.....
If you can not trivialize the suffering of multiple people I know who have been in an ICU, friends who have lost family, and my two friends who are COVID ICU nurses I'd appreciate it.
The government has an incentive to shut this kind of stuff down, because it takes advantage of the intellectually vulnerable who think a lady batting 0.000 somehow cracked the code on a virus.
Likely in her contract, any sort of research she did was property of the company. Just like any job where you create something while at work, its property of the company.
Good for Tennessee! I know I'm insensitive to the political virus. Watch how numbers decline on November 3rd through the 10th....
It's a money thing, and anyone trying to understand just look at the way most every CFB/NFL team are going to play football over ad revenue. It's like saying nobody needs healthcare,... while a pandemic Is reportedly destroying our country.
If you can not trivialize the suffering of multiple people I know who have been in an ICU, friends who have lost family, and my two friends who are COVID ICU nurses I'd appreciate it.
Gonna be amazing when it totally disappears as soon as Biden is elected.