Paul Finebaum talked about our football team not being fully committed and about the apparatus around him not being strong enough.
Nah…..you can look at a decision made in december 2022 which sunk this program. That decision came on the heels of the fourth best season in school history.Gotta agree with Paul Finebaum here, even though he’s a giant douche.
Our fans care way more about the niche sports at Mississippi State, than the one sport that actually would make an economic impact on the city of Starkville and University as a whole. Football is the only reason we are currently in the SEC and the only reason we have anything that would qualify as “nice”.
You can point to the decisions made in late 2019 early 2020 by State & OM AD’s for the ever growing gap between the two schools and programs now. Unfortunately, instead of digging deep and supporting football to get us out of this hole, we will continue to ***** and complain until we are sunk forever.
We are not a serious program.
That same decision then trickled down and sunk another program too..........Nah…..you can look at a decision made in december 2022 which sunk this program. That decision came on the heels of the fourth best season in school history.
It's the same in every sport, so you're basically choosing not to give State money for athletics I assume. Thus, you won't complain with results or care about coaching hires etc? That's a strange decision when the school could be stuck without a major conference if we don't support it. We'd lose all funding for athletics and the school would basically shrink to nothing without major athletics.I can only speak for me.
Money is the fuel that drives this sport. Period.
I personally refuse to give my money for fuel that MSU will use to gas up a Prius in a race against 911 Turbos. No matter how efficient, this race is unwinnable in the current format.
Rev share will be the tide by which all boats rise.We're punting until rev share, when the talent gap will be decreased.
Hard to believe that as recently as 8 years ago, MSU and UM football programs were virtual equals and had been for 30 years. Since then, they've literally done everything right while we've done everything wrong. We are at least a decade behind, if not more.Gotta agree with Paul Finebaum here, even though he’s a giant douche.
Our fans care way more about the niche sports at Mississippi State, than the one sport that actually would make an economic impact on the city of Starkville and University as a whole. Football is the only reason we are currently in the SEC and the only reason we have anything that would qualify as “nice”.
You can point to the decisions made in late 2019 early 2020 by State & OM AD’s for the ever growing gap between the two schools and programs now. Unfortunately, instead of digging deep and supporting football to get us out of this hole, we will continue to ***** and complain until we are sunk forever.
We are not a serious program.
No it won't.We're punting until rev share, when the talent gap will be decreased.
I don't understand. The jeans page sunshine pumpers have consistently preached that there is NO WAY state will ever be left out of any future realignment.It's the same in every sport, so you're basically choosing not to give State money for athletics I assume. Thus, you won't complain with results or care about coaching hires etc? That's a strange decision when the school could be stuck without a major conference if we don't support it. We'd lose all funding for athletics and the school would basically shrink to nothing without major athletics.
I respect your devotion, but the football world has passed MSU by, along with many other small-mid schools.It's the same in every sport, so you're basically choosing not to give State money for athletics I assume. Thus, you won't complain with results or care about coaching hires etc? That's a strange decision when the school could be stuck without a major conference if we don't support it.
I don't know, Mr. Murray and another over there say it's the end of the MSU world. But they're ok with just getting a check because there's nothing we can do because we suck so bad. But have you toured the Grant Museum and eaten our cheese?I don't understand. The jeans page sunshine pumpers have consistently preached that there is NO WAY state will ever be left out of any future realignment.
The actual decision to hire John Cohen as AD in 2016 is what sunk MSU Football.Nah…..you can look at a decision made in december 2022 which sunk this program. That decision came on the heels of the fourth best season in school history.
You totally nailed it. I lived in Birmingham for a year and started listening to his radio talk show. This was before the SEC network. He was a total Alabama homer and basically glommed on to the University of Alabama to get listeners. He never uttered a respectful word of any sort toward MSU. The SEC network should be ashamed for hiring this Jerry Springer of the sports world.Paul had been pissing on us for years. I think it was Leach that didn’t want him on campus. I don’t listen to his redneck spotlight show but I know his shtick. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again God messed up as good dick when he put ears on Finebaum
Yea I’ll just accept you lumping in the two time national COY with jomo and arnett cuz you hated leach****We haven’t made a good football decision since Mullen left. We can nitpick Moorhead, Leach, Arnett, etc. they all were poor choices.
But the most pivotal was in 2019. We just beat OM in back-to-back Egg Bowls, but all knew Moorhead was not the right answer for our program. Instead of firing him after the game, Cohen’s bitchass panicked and it cost us everything. Of course, **** got worse, and a month later we fired after the sh1tty bowl game.
Meanwhile, OM hires Kiffin.
The second part is, we made headway into agreeing with Sarkisian to be our HC, but of course, Cohen’s bitchass panicked again and pivoted to Leach. The rest is history and now the gap between OM and State is as large as it’s been in 60 years.
We haven't been serious about it since Mullen left and really, since Cohen took over. There was no investment whatsoever after the last endzone improvement a decade ago. Now, NIL and the settlement have us in a bind.It’s not that we’re not serious about it. We’re just poor.
These are the same people that wanted Leach fired during the 9-4 season. They cheered arnett firing Leachs staff. Funny how nfl films has a feature film on Mike leach where he is called a brilliant innovator who changed the game by nfl GMs and head coaches. But you know the Louisville high school coach , obese34 and the rest of the low iq crowd know better.Leach was not a poor choice. His recipe would have worked here at he not died. There's too much proof of that at his previous stops to even attempt to argue otherwise. Since then though. Yikes.
Ok. Let's throw out some numbers. Feel free to tell me where my numbers are wrong and/or offer your own theory.No it won't.
If that were true, we would still be on Gene’s Page.Y’all will believe anything
The problem is that even if the gap shrinks (which it won’t), there still will be a gap. Any gap at all is bad news for MSU. We had enough struggles to begin with on the recruiting front without the portal and NIL, just due to Starkville / MS in general / lack of history / stadium and facilities, etc. We have to pay significantly above market as it is.Ok. Let's throw out some numbers. Feel free to tell me where my numbers are wrong and/or offer your own theory.
In 2024:
Under revenue sharing:
- Texas reportedly spent ~$22.3M on NIL.
- Mississippi State spent ~$6.5M.
- That's a $15.8M gap in NIL investment—massive disparity in roster resources.
So, yes—the relative spending gap shrinks.
- All SEC schools will likely spend around $15M on football players through formal revenue sharing.
- Mississippi State jumps from $6.5M to ~$15M.
- Texas also adds $15M in revenue sharing and supplements with NIL.
Even if Texas still has a bigger total player compensation pot (say, $15M + $10M in NIL = $25M), the difference between them and Mississippi State is more like $10M, not the $15M+ we saw when NIL was the only vehicle for player payments.
Why This Might “Level the Field” (To a Degree):
Caveats:
- Baseline parity: Revenue sharing creates a floor that everyone reaches.
- NIL becomes additive, not the only driver of talent acquisition.
- Middle/lower-tier programs become more competitive in recruiting because they can offer a guaranteed, structured revenue-sharing payout.
Big picture, revenue sharing could:
- Texas, Georgia, Alabama, etc., will still outspend the bottom half via NIL, facilities, coaching salaries, etc.
- NIL won’t go away—boosters and collectives will still matter.
- Some schools might be more restricted by Title IX compliance, legal risks, or institutional willingness to spend.
- Compress the extreme gaps between the top and bottom of the SEC.
- Give mid-tier programs a fighting chance in recruiting.
- Introduce more structure and predictability to player compensation.
I just don't buy this. Football games are a hot ticket when we're good.Gotta agree with Paul Finebaum here, even though he’s a giant douche.
Our fans care way more about the niche sports at Mississippi State, than the one sport that actually would make an economic impact on the city of Starkville and University as a whole. Football is the only reason we are currently in the SEC and the only reason we have anything that would qualify as “nice”.
You can point to the decisions made in late 2019 early 2020 by State & OM AD’s for the ever growing gap between the two schools and programs now. Unfortunately, instead of digging deep and supporting football to get us out of this hole, we will continue to ***** and complain until we are sunk forever.
We are not a serious program.
Rev share is the minimum stack to sit at a table game where everyone else still has a bigger stack. It won't manage any gap in resources - only change the formalities of how the cash flow works.Ok. Let's throw out some numbers. Feel free to tell me where my numbers are wrong and/or offer your own theory.
In 2024:
Under revenue sharing:
- Texas reportedly spent ~$22.3M on NIL.
- Mississippi State spent ~$6.5M.
- That's a $15.8M gap in NIL investment—massive disparity in roster resources.
So, yes—the relative spending gap shrinks.
- All SEC schools will likely spend around $15M on football players through formal revenue sharing.
- Mississippi State jumps from $6.5M to ~$15M.
- Texas also adds $15M in revenue sharing and supplements with NIL.
Even if Texas still has a bigger total player compensation pot (say, $15M + $10M in NIL = $25M), the difference between them and Mississippi State is more like $10M, not the $15M+ we saw when NIL was the only vehicle for player payments.
Why This Might “Level the Field” (To a Degree):
Caveats:
- Baseline parity: Revenue sharing creates a floor that everyone reaches.
- NIL becomes additive, not the only driver of talent acquisition.
- Middle/lower-tier programs become more competitive in recruiting because they can offer a guaranteed, structured revenue-sharing payout.
Big picture, revenue sharing could:
- Texas, Georgia, Alabama, etc., will still outspend the bottom half via NIL, facilities, coaching salaries, etc.
- NIL won’t go away—boosters and collectives will still matter.
- Some schools might be more restricted by Title IX compliance, legal risks, or institutional willingness to spend.
- Compress the extreme gaps between the top and bottom of the SEC.
- Give mid-tier programs a fighting chance in recruiting.
- Introduce more structure and predictability to player compensation.
There's always been a gap. In our best years, there was a gap between us and the top of the SEC. And we managed to win 7-10 games.The problem is that even if the gap shrinks (which it won’t), there still will be a gap. Any gap at all is bad news for MSU. We had enough struggles to begin with on the recruiting front without the portal and NIL, just due to Starkville / MS in general / lack of history / stadium and facilities, etc. We have to pay significantly above market as it is.
If what you say comes to fruition, I can see it helping the Auburns and Arkansas types, but it’s not going to do much for us at all.