If the blue bloods left for a "super league", who would be hurt more, them or the also-rans like us?

Who would be hurt more?

  • Blue bloods

    Votes: 19 45.2%
  • Also-rans

    Votes: 23 54.8%

  • Total voters
    42
Not always. I used to get up and watch Gameday and then I'd watch games all the way til at least the Saturday night ABC game ended, then I'd see if any other close finishes were happening. That would be over 12 hours of football on Saturday, closer to 14 or 15. Then I'd watch the NFL on Sunday, not as dedicated, but I'd watch.

Now I watch neither and go entire weekends without seeing any football. It's just verifying what I thought, that all these changes would cause me to lose interest, just like I lost interest in March Madness.

I still follow on this board and watch highlights occasionally on youtube, but with the way it's going I doubt I'll even care if college football exists in a few years.
I'm watching less as well. I'm usually reading or doing something around the house on Saturdays and Sundays so I will usually have a game on in the background on television or computer. I don't know your age, but I'm in my 70s and while I don't want to sound like an old man yelling at a cloud, the game has changed so much and the hype is way out of whack that I've lost interest. I love the Gophers and no longer have any real allegiance to a pro team (I used to be an ardent Packer fan), but now I usually watch to see a great play or two.
 

If the Blue Bloods started their own gig, it would be the end of college football at that level and it would just be semi-pro football at that tier (some would argue that not much would actually change in that regard). But the Blue Bloods would negotiate a giant television deal and feed off of that. I don't know if a new set-up where they exited would change the portal and NIL (probably not), but there would likely still be poaching from the non-Blue Blood talent pool at the end of each season.

I wonder if the NCAA ever thinks back and wonders if they could have gotten in front of all this by allowing NIL and some payment framework for all players. Given where things are at, it might not have made any difference, but the NCAA's intransigence out of the gate was simply wrongheaded.
I don't think the Blue Bloods would negotiate a giant TV deal because the networks are smart enough to realize they'll lose 70% of their viewership immediately by ditching the also-rans. And that 70% will just be the start because a lot of the bandwagon fans that just like to jump on to a winner like Ohio State and Alabama won't stay a fan for long once those teams are just average in their semi-pro league. It's a lot more fun to root for and easier to get investment for a 12 win team than a 6 win team. They'll certainly lose me as a fan. As soon as Ohio State leaves the B1G for a super league, they're no longer my second favorite team because I'd have no connection to them. I'd also never watch Alabama again because they'd no longer be a part of the "enemy league to the south". I'd support the Gophers in whatever league they are in and the Vikings.

I hope the decision makers know how many of us are in this camp because it would help the Gophers negotiate. Maybe let Ohio State/Oregon have 20% more revenue, but not 100%. We want to at least be able to be competitive in games, not your doormat. Otherwise, blow it up and we can all make less money. Do we really care? College football wasn't worse before all the money started flowing in. It will do just fine without it. Less money will hurt Ohio State and the state of Ohio a lot more than it will hurt the Gophers and Minnesota. The Gophers aren't as important a part of our state economy. Our team will likely do better competitively in the new Big Ten and Ohio State will absolutely do worse. College football is already JV to the NFL. I don't really care if we step down to JV of the JV. The Gophers will still be the strongest college football team in our state and I'm an alum just like many, many of you.
 

Not always. I used to get up and watch Gameday and then I'd watch games all the way til at least the Saturday night ABC game ended, then I'd see if any other close finishes were happening. That would be over 12 hours of football on Saturday, closer to 14 or 15. Then I'd watch the NFL on Sunday, not as dedicated, but I'd watch.

Now I watch neither and go entire weekends without seeing any football. It's just verifying what I thought, that all these changes would cause me to lose interest, just like I lost interest in March Madness.

I still follow on this board and watch highlights occasionally on youtube, but with the way it's going I doubt I'll even care if college football exists in a few years.

Respect your sentiment. I will always enjoy good competitions and drama but the naked bias, favoritism, profit-chasing above all else, prop bets etc demolishing college sports right now has made me more cynical (and I’m already mega cynical as a former NFL aficionado). Corruption, shady officials, drama has always been part and parcel of the experience. Everyone has their limit at which they’re out. I’m not quite there but Pettiti is challenging me.
 

Respect your sentiment. I will always enjoy good competitions and drama but the naked bias, favoritism, profit-chasing above all else, prop bets etc demolishing college sports right now has made me more cynical (and I’m already mega cynical as a former NFL aficionado). Corruption, shady officials, drama has always been part and parcel of the experience. Everyone has their limit at which they’re out. I’m not quite there but Pettiti is challenging me.
I agree. I'm really not much of a fan of the NFL. It's so clearly all about the money. The more college football becomes that way, the less interest I'll have.
 

Seems logical that if some revenue goes away that expenses would need to decrease. But it’s likely we’d have NIL money in the top 1/4 of that league.
That’s assuming there isn’t a decrease in interest due to moving to a lower level.

There’s a lot of unknown and assuming you’re taking Minnesota’s athletic department and finances as currently constructed and dropping them into a lower level of competition is likely not realistic.

I think there’s a real question to whether the U’s administration is just tolerating athletics given the amount of money brought in and would that sentiment change if there’s less money.
 


College football will be the last sport the NFL captures, kills and devours. But they are coming.

It is no coincidence that the NFL is putting the Bears/Packers and Eagles/Commanders against the CFP this year. They know they can easily snatch most of the potential East Coast and Midwest CFP viewership with these two games. There are not going to be any “Big Ten West” or Northeast/Mid-Atlantic programs in the CFP.
 

I don't know your age, but I'm in my 70s and while I don't want to sound like an old man yelling at a cloud, the game has changed so much and the hype is way out of whack that I've lost interest.

I'm 47 and also miss what attracted me to college football. I could go on and on....

I love the Gophers and no longer have any real allegiance to a pro team (I used to be an ardent Packer fan), but now I usually watch to see a great play or two.
Huh, I used to be a Packers fan too. I don't care about the NFL at all now, but I suppose I'd be ok with the vikes doing well since they have Cashman and Brosmer on the team.
 

a lot of the bandwagon fans that just like to jump on to a winner like Ohio State and Alabama won't stay a fan for long once those teams are just average in their semi-pro league.
You've got a good point here. I would say I was kind of part of that, but not a "bandwagon" fan. Like, I enjoyed watching Alabama try and run the table during Saban's tenue and I'd enjoy seeing if anyone could knock them off - but I wasn't an Alabama fan per se. I just liked that the game had this element where you'd start the season and whether it was Alabama, or USC before them, or maybe Clemson alongside them, see if they can with the NC with a perfect record - or enjoy the upset of them being taken down in the regular season.
 

Both. Fans have little reason to watch or care about what's going on in the other league.
 



I don't think the Blue Bloods would negotiate a giant TV deal because the networks are smart enough to realize they'll lose 70% of their viewership immediately by ditching the also-rans. And that 70% will just be the start because a lot of the bandwagon fans that just like to jump on to a winner like Ohio State and Alabama won't stay a fan for long once those teams are just average in their semi-pro league. It's a lot more fun to root for and easier to get investment for a 12 win team than a 6 win team. They'll certainly lose me as a fan. As soon as Ohio State leaves the B1G for a super league, they're no longer my second favorite team because I'd have no connection to them. I'd also never watch Alabama again because they'd no longer be a part of the "enemy league to the south". I'd support the Gophers in whatever league they are in and the Vikings.

I hope the decision makers know how many of us are in this camp because it would help the Gophers negotiate. Maybe let Ohio State/Oregon have 20% more revenue, but not 100%. We want to at least be able to be competitive in games, not your doormat. Otherwise, blow it up and we can all make less money. Do we really care? College football wasn't worse before all the money started flowing in. It will do just fine without it. Less money will hurt Ohio State and the state of Ohio a lot more than it will hurt the Gophers and Minnesota. The Gophers aren't as important a part of our state economy. Our team will likely do better competitively in the new Big Ten and Ohio State will absolutely do worse. College football is already JV to the NFL. I don't really care if we step down to JV of the JV. The Gophers will still be the strongest college football team in our state and I'm an alum just like many, many of you.
From my vantage point, if the Blue Bloods would bolt, they would immediately try to fashion some kind of partnership with the NFL. It wouldn't take the form of cash, but it may include some type of informal affiliation. The Blue Bloods would promote their product "You're watching guys who play on Saturday who WILL be playing on Sunday." The draftniks--both guys who are paid for it and basement dwellers who do it for free--would go nuts. And I think with the portal being the way it is, any player who views himself as having a professional future is going to step up to the Blue Blood league. The also-rans are going to see their rosters raided to an even greater extent.

It's all going to boil down to whether some big dollar folks are willing to throw money into something like a Blue Blood league. There are some stupid billionaires who lucked into their bucks, but there are enough left over that could be pitched to.

Sport used to be simply sport. It was entertainment but not really marketed as such. It is now.
 

College football will be the last sport the NFL captures, kills and devours. But they are coming.

It is no coincidence that the NFL is putting the Bears/Packers and Eagles/Commanders against the CFP this year. They know they can easily snatch most of the potential East Coast and Midwest CFP viewership with these two games. There are not going to be any “Big Ten West” or Northeast/Mid-Atlantic programs in the CFP.
I wonder if at some point the NFL develops a minor league similar to baseball. Maybe that’s less feasible now that NIL exists.
 

I don't know which of the groups of schools would win or lose, but I would thoroughly enjoy the brawl amongst the schools to be included. I think ten posters on this board putting together a list of 20 teams to be in a super league would come up with ten different lists.
 

Sport used to be simply sport. It was entertainment but not really marketed as such. It is now.

This is my sentiment. I enjoy watching sports for the idea of 2 teams going at it to see who is best. But now it's very much clouded by "the storylines", "hype machines" and gambling talk. As we saw with the officiating in the Oregon game, I'm not entirely convinced that every game is one the up and up. Too much pressure to continue to drive specific narratives.
 






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