LongTimeListener
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2009
- Messages
- 40,531
The one good thing for the lords of college football in the last year is that as bad as things have gotten, interest and dollars only go up. So does any of this trouble matter? I mean, how worse can it get than:
--The Heisman Trophy winner was obviously getting paid
--Just as obviously, both teams in the championship game were as dirty as yesterday's dishwater
--The most decorated player and team of the past decade were stripped of their awards, and the premier program on the West Coast and one of the top five programs in the nation is in four-year jail
--The premier program in the most historic conference had to shitcan its coach after months of embarrassment
--The Fiesta Bowl and the entire BCS were exposed as a boiling pot of corruption and graft
--One of the pillar conferences was on the verge of disintegration and only survived by giving in to the extortionist demands of its top program
And yet ticket sales go up, new TV deals are bringing dollars nobody could ever have dreamed, and interest seems, if not as high as ever, certainly on a major upward swing. Taken as its own sport, college football has to be #2 or 3 in popularity in the United States, behind the NFL and MLB.
So, for all this talk about the need for reform, can you really blame the NCAA for not wanting to mess with it? Seems like the tens of millions of people who watch have made their moral peace with the whole thing and just want to watch.
--The Heisman Trophy winner was obviously getting paid
--Just as obviously, both teams in the championship game were as dirty as yesterday's dishwater
--The most decorated player and team of the past decade were stripped of their awards, and the premier program on the West Coast and one of the top five programs in the nation is in four-year jail
--The premier program in the most historic conference had to shitcan its coach after months of embarrassment
--The Fiesta Bowl and the entire BCS were exposed as a boiling pot of corruption and graft
--One of the pillar conferences was on the verge of disintegration and only survived by giving in to the extortionist demands of its top program
And yet ticket sales go up, new TV deals are bringing dollars nobody could ever have dreamed, and interest seems, if not as high as ever, certainly on a major upward swing. Taken as its own sport, college football has to be #2 or 3 in popularity in the United States, behind the NFL and MLB.
So, for all this talk about the need for reform, can you really blame the NCAA for not wanting to mess with it? Seems like the tens of millions of people who watch have made their moral peace with the whole thing and just want to watch.