Dan had Pat Forde on to discuss the settlement. Pat multiple times mentioned Mississippi State as the example of the school that won't be able to keep up with it's competition in this new reality.
Yeah a lot of us won't. $20M payroll won't be an easy thing to deal with for most programs.Dan had Pat Forde on to discuss the settlement. Pat multiple times mentioned Mississippi State as the example of the school that won't be able to keep up with it's competition in this new reality.
He’s not wrong. Theres probably 20 schools that could do it yearly.Dan had Pat Forde on to discuss the settlement. Pat multiple times mentioned Mississippi State as the example of the school that won't be able to keep up with it's competition in this new reality.
Agree. Just sucks to be the "Poster Child".He’s not wrong. Theres probably 20 schools that could do it yearly.
I think the 20 million is above all existing costs.Forde is an intelligent guy and a good reporter, but he is also a total ***.
I think we will be shocked to hear the portion of that $20 million annually that the athletes are already receiving with Scholarships, Full Cost of Attendance stipends, health/medical coverage, tutors, etc.
This settlement will be the end of major athletics for schools outside the Power 4 and it will be a real challenge for the Big 12 & possibly ACC schools.
All the schools in the Big Ten & SEC unless the conferences decide to get rid of some schools.
If that's the case, I guess we can save up and have Bulldog football every 4 years or so. "Yessir, got us a Liberty Bowl appearance on lay-a-way."I think the 20 million is above all existing costs.
No doubt that it is above all current costs, but we will be shocked at the current number. My opinion is that the projected numbers are manageable for the MSU Athletic Department at current attendance & revenue levels. They will probably need to tap some obvious opportunities for additional revenue (folks with outfield rigs need to be reaching for the wallet/checkbook)I think the 20 million is above all existing costs.
Um... Have you been getting ESPN for free all these years?Mark my word, it's going to get to the point where you have to start paying to watch the games on TV. IT'S COMING. The NFL experimented with it the last couple of years on Amazon Prime.
I'm talking about PPV.Um... Have you been getting ESPN for free all these years?
So, you are talking about how it worked in the 00s, before everything was consolidated into a nice and orderly platform and more content is available than ever before.I'm talking about PPV.
I fondly recall dropping $9.99 to Starksville Cable to watch us get our *** kicked at Auburn in 2003 or so. The picture quality was a hair better than the Zapruder film.So, you are talking about how it worked in the 00s, before everything was consolidated into a nice and orderly platform and more content is available than ever before.
Back then I could pay $40 or so to watch MSU play on ppv.
There is probably a tipping point coming soon. An invisible line where the NFL may run the risk out pricing itself. $5 here, $20 there heads up after a while people get tired of paying that much for it. I think it may be like they the movie industry. People just got tired of spending that much money at the theater.So, you are talking about how it worked in the 00s, before everything was consolidated into a nice and orderly platform and more content is available than ever before.
Back then I could pay $40 or so to watch MSU play on ppv.
I think you’re right and I think the NFL is intentionally trying to find that line. Thus far, they have had no problem getting people to sign up for whatever is necessary to watch a game.There is probably a tipping point coming soon. An invisible line where the NFL may run the risk out pricing itself. $5 here, $20 there heads up after a while people get tired of paying that much for it. I think it may be like they the movie industry. People just got tired of spending that much money at the theater.
I guess it could be either but it's going to happen. We aren't going to get the games w/o having to pay more than what we do now.So, you are talking about how it worked in the 00s, before everything was consolidated into a nice and orderly platform and more content is available than ever before.
Back then I could pay $40 or so to watch MSU play on ppv.
Anyone with any common sense has realized this for quite sometime now. I hope the new league opens soon.Dan had Pat Forde on to discuss the settlement. Pat multiple times mentioned Mississippi State as the example of the school that won't be able to keep up with it's competition in this new reality.
Reminds me of Pat's career. He can't keep up with the new reality in journalism.Dan had Pat Forde on to discuss the settlement. Pat multiple times mentioned Mississippi State as the example of the school that won't be able to keep up with it's competition in this new reality.
.....and non-revenue sports. Specifically men's.With that said, I think where State will see and feel the pain is in facilities. Taking 20million away from our budget will lessen the money for capital improvements and all the little nice things, like drone shows and fireworks.
Does this really just raise the floor? So we can have $20MM in "legal" payouts to kids now. Should we assume that all of the illegal payouts will stop, or should we assume that we now have $20MM legal + whatever other stupid under the table money boosters want to toss at kids?The $20M cap actually makes us a lot MORE competitive with the big schools. Let’s say Texas is spending $10 on NIL & we’re spending $2M. Both schools add $20M from their SEC distributions. That narrows the percentage gap to $30M and $22M. Huge win for Mississippi State.
It’s $20M + whatever outside NIL money you can raise. No need to have any “under the table” money these days since it’s all legal. The absolute gap between us and the elite schools won’t change. But the percentage gap will close substantially. Instead of paying maybe 20% what they’re paying, we’ll be able to pay 60%.Does this really just raise the floor? So we can have $20MM in "legal" payouts to kids now. Should we assume that all of the illegal payouts will stop, or should we assume that we now have $20MM legal + whatever other stupid under the table money boosters want to toss at kids?
I misunderstood. So NIL will be the difference.It’s $20M + whatever outside NIL money you can raise. No need to have any “under the table” money these days since it’s all legal. The absolute gap between us and the elite schools won’t change. But the percentage gap will close substantially. Instead of paying maybe 20% what they’re paying, we’ll be able to pay 60%.
Per the Ross Dellenger story, that’s not known. Each school will decide how to split the money between the sports. If you divide it equally, you run the risk your football players sue you for not paying them their fair value. If you weight it to the revenue sports you run the risk of a Title IX lawsuit. The smart schools will pay the revenue sports more until they’re forced not to.If all athletes will be paid, will Title 9 still apply? What if you can’t “hire” enough soccer players to field a team because you are spending salary money on other sports?
Nothing. They'll just do it through NILIf 20 mil is the salary cap, what will be the penalty for exceeding the cap? The schools that cheat now won’t let the 20 mil limit hold them back if they have unlimited resources (cash)
That will be pretty easy to audit. And the plaintiff attorneys will be auditing compliance.If 20 mil is the salary cap, what will be the penalty for exceeding the cap? The schools that cheat now won’t let the 20 mil limit hold them back if they have unlimited resources (cash)