College football 2024

I imagine they'll fine tune their approach in the future. For the first year, I'd say the results were good. They captured some of the magic of March Madness. And nobody should have any issues with the final 4 being undeserving.

My only complaint is that they can't call an audible and play the Championship somewhere within driving distance of South Bend and Columbus. Perhaps Indianapolis? That would truly capture the best of college football and be a tailgate for the ages.
Penn state didn’t beat anyone all year and should’ve played Oregon tenn or Georgia instead of the weakest playoff teams
 
Texas lost, so there is a God, lol. Don't care too much about who wins the championship, but I have no love for the Domers. Join a conference already.
 
Truthfully, it’ll hurt the big schools, but the NFL needs a D-league that doesn’t start with ‘NCAA’.
 
Truthfully, it’ll hurt the big schools, ...

how? so what if they won't be able to get "students" into some Sports Medicine program or Sports Management program or some other silly program with a $75,000 per year tuition?
 
how? so what if they won't be able to get "students" into some Sports Medicine program or Sports Management program or some other silly program with a $75,000 per year tuition?

Money generated thru football programs fund many, many Title IX programs. Take the ‘star’ aspect out football and the money follows.
 
Money generated thru football programs fund many, many Title IX programs. Take the ‘star’ aspect out football and the money follows.
Yup. Money from OU football pays for A LOT of other sports. Football pays for itself and then some ($199MM in revenue in 2023 for OU athletics with $6.5MM being transferred to the academic side of the books), not to mention that you often have a direct correlation between university donations/gifts and football program performance (not that it makes sense for it to be that way). I can't tell you the number of multi-million dollar renovations that occurred on the campus after OU went on a tear in the early 2000s. Sports program dominance excites the alumni base and spurs financial gifts. Places like tOSU, UT, Michigan, etc all have enormous alumni bases that feed money into the schools.

Right or wrong, people don't generally get too excited about gifting money because the debate team is doing well, or the Engineering program won a robotics contest.
 
Now if we'd just legalize parimutuel betting with the schools getting a 20% cut, our journey to the dark side would be complete....
Only a matter of time before star players start getting NIL deals from the various betting apps.
Saw a commercial yesterday with Eli Manning for FanDuel. Sad.
 
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