Gophers7NatTitlesBadgers0
New Orleans 2020
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Can we stop pretending Suggs is going to a school to play football after he graduates hs?
Can we stop pretending Suggs is going to a school to play football after he graduates hs?
Yesterday the Gophers offered Roger Rosengarten an OT from Colorado.
https://247sports.com/player/roger-rosengarten-46058991/
Sounds like a great name for an attorney. Or dentist.
Or a doctor that Rhoda Morganstern's mom wants to set her up with.
I wonder how many here have zero idea who that was?
I wonder how many here have zero idea who that was?
I think Suggs will make a fantastic QB in football should be choose that route. That kid knows how to move the football. He is obviously great at basketball, but football may make him more money.Can we stop pretending Suggs is going to a school to play football after he graduates hs?
I think Suggs will make a fantastic QB in football should be choose that route. That kid knows how to move the football. He is obviously great at basketball, but football may make him more money.
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Football makes more money, but easier to get hurt. Depends what he likes more. From everything I've read, it'll be basketball.
Football revenues are higher, but individual basketball players make way more on average. It's a case of dividing the pie into 53 pieces instead of 12 pieces. And, as you mentioned, basketball players tend to feel a lot better than football players at age 50, 60, or 70.
Assuming he becomes really good and could choose between being an NBA player and an NFL QB - it'd be close, but he'd almost certainly make more money in basketball. For one thing, he can enter the league at least two years earlier and thus have an additional two years of earning power, plus he'll most likely last longer playing basketball.
Let's pick two players at random - I'm picking Aaron Rodgers and LeBron James, because they're close to the same age. Rodgers entered the NFL in 2005, and LeBron entered the NBA in 2003 (there's that 2 year thing I mentioned above), even though Rodgers is a year older. Both would be considered to be at the top of their games, so I think they make for a reasonable comparison. Through the 2017-18 season, LeBron had made $237M from basketball. Rodgers has made $181M from football. Rodgers just signed a huge contract extension that takes him through the end of 2023 and, assuming he actually makes it through the length of the deal (he'll be 40), he'll have made $315M. LeBron has a contract that takes him through 2022 (he'll be 37) and by the time that contract is done, he'll have made $390M. If he played through age 40 to match Rodgers, he'd likely top $500M.
Football revenues are higher, but individual basketball players make way more on average. It's a case of dividing the pie into 53 pieces instead of 12 pieces. And, as you mentioned, basketball players tend to feel a lot better than football players at age 50, 60, or 70.
Assuming he becomes really good and could choose between being an NBA player and an NFL QB - it'd be close, but he'd almost certainly make more money in basketball. For one thing, he can enter the league at least two years earlier and thus have an additional two years of earning power, plus he'll most likely last longer playing basketball.
Let's pick two players at random - I'm picking Aaron Rodgers and LeBron James, because they're close to the same age. Rodgers entered the NFL in 2005, and LeBron entered the NBA in 2003 (there's that 2 year thing I mentioned above), even though Rodgers is a year older. Both would be considered to be at the top of their games, so I think they make for a reasonable comparison. Through the 2017-18 season, LeBron had made $237M from basketball. Rodgers has made $181M from football. Rodgers just signed a huge contract extension that takes him through the end of 2023 and, assuming he actually makes it through the length of the deal (he'll be 40), he'll have made $315M. LeBron has a contract that takes him through 2022 (he'll be 37) and by the time that contract is done, he'll have made $390M. If he played through age 40 to match Rodgers, he'd likely top $500M.
What if you factor in quality of life?Good analysis. Factoring in the tax rates of Wisconsin versus Florida (no state tax), Ohio (similar to Wisconsin) and California (substantially higher than Wisconsin) it probably wouldn't change your work much at all unless LeBron stayed in California until he was 40, then the margin between the two would be smaller.
What a clinic by Jalen Suggs tonight. Guy looks like a rich man's Adrian Martinez.
Good to hear Fleck is blowing up his phone with texts. At least the recruiting hustle is there.
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Jalen Suggs retweeting and liking tweets about him playing football and basketball at Minnesota (11/24):
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This is an interesting story on former Viking Brad Johnson's son. He is also Mark Richt's nephew. However, he has chosen LSU over Miami. If he had chose a place like Stanford, you could say he wanted a higher academic university. Hard to use location as a reason, since I'm guessing most would find Miami more attractive than Baton Rouge.
https://www.yahoo.com/sports/mark-r...-max-johnson-commits-lsu-miami-032553593.html
To be fair, I can see where someone would not want to play for a family member.
This is an interesting story on former Viking Brad Johnson's son. He is also Mark Richt's nephew. However, he has chosen LSU over Miami. If he had chose a place like Stanford, you could say he wanted a higher academic university. Hard to use location as a reason, since I'm guessing most would find Miami more attractive than Baton Rouge.
https://www.yahoo.com/sports/mark-r...-max-johnson-commits-lsu-miami-032553593.html
To be fair, I can see where someone would not want to play for a family member.