The law of unintended consequences.... Texas Tech has always had money; they just didn't go all in on athletics until NIL and the Portal created a system where a school can openly buy players. Now the relatively low budget P4's have to either spend those $50 mil TV checks on players, or they can't compete; and if they can't compete, they will soon find out that those who can compete will find a way to kick them out of the "haves" club and quit sending them checks.Texas Tech has a $28M NIL budget for football alone.
I have long since advocatimg for letting schools choose which sports they want to focus on. Scholarship limit should be cumululative....not per sport... also a way to further your idea about saving money for another sports, how about go two or three years and just save, maybe even save the scholarship momey too, build up a warchest, then come out swinging
If it’s all about money ( and it is) we will never have enough money to compete until we have a medical school and a law school. And surely, the school to the east will never let that happen.
All these great ideas, plans, schemes, etc.....but the big hurdle and question is how do you attract and retain players with NO money? Again UL has no money and the deficit is worse than previously stated! On top of that no to very little money coming in, stadium half empty, aging fan base who has somewhat carried the fundraising are slowly dying out.
Fully agree. Drawing the line at the Top 48 revenue schools (out of 68 P4's), the incentives are too great for them to NOT thin out the P4 ranks. The numbers could thin out more. The realignment dominos will keep falling. In the meantime, it would make sense for NCAA members to vote for reducing the required number of sports. Too many mouths to feed in this high cost environment.
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