Old Man Mike
Fast as Lightning!
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All of the details are unpredictable because this is still a "charging into the (mostly) unknown." But I (hate it but) believe that the next several years will be a burgeoning break-out of ostensible cash-bought teams while their universities shamelessly create (or maintain) the illusion that their teams are University teams. As most of us curmudgeons already know, this is how the Southern powers already operate, but they'll have to work a little harder on the disingenuous LIARS Smiley Faces when everybody on their teams have their hands out openly all over the NIL media. The fans will either flat out love it, or will love it while turning a blind eye, because deep at heart most of them (at those schools) don't really give a sh!t about the "school" vs the football team anyway.
I'm going to repeat a story here that I've written twice. Twenty+ years or so ago, this "dirty" or "illegal" athlete enticing was beginning to create some murmuring within the academic organizations that joined together American universities, and some real talk was beginning about "low standards" relating to football players. Schools like Miami, Florida State, and the SEC powers were in the spotlight. Someone went to the president of (I think my memory is accurate here, but it could have been any SEC power) Georgia, and expressed these concerns. Would Georgia raise its standards to get football "student/athletes" closer in education achievement to the the regular student body. The president said, astoundingly: No. That would be like unilateral
disarmament.
The PRESIDENTS of those universities don't even want their football teams hampered by academics.
I'm going to repeat a story here that I've written twice. Twenty+ years or so ago, this "dirty" or "illegal" athlete enticing was beginning to create some murmuring within the academic organizations that joined together American universities, and some real talk was beginning about "low standards" relating to football players. Schools like Miami, Florida State, and the SEC powers were in the spotlight. Someone went to the president of (I think my memory is accurate here, but it could have been any SEC power) Georgia, and expressed these concerns. Would Georgia raise its standards to get football "student/athletes" closer in education achievement to the the regular student body. The president said, astoundingly: No. That would be like unilateral
disarmament.
The PRESIDENTS of those universities don't even want their football teams hampered by academics.