SeattleCardinal
Hall of Famer
Jalin Conyers is gone.
Jalin Conyers is gone.
Those are the two that the ASU collective is going to have to pay up for, I think, to have a chance to keep them. Rashada staying is not a certainty either.I'd expect more but ASU doesn't have blue chip kids anyone would want, maybe Badger & BJ Green.
That’s a bad loss. This program needs an enema.Jalin Conyers is gone.
Correct, however, I think the transfer portal basically forces an enema on most teams any more year over yearThat’s a bad loss. This program needs an enema.
I don't think Rashada can transfer again with the new NCAA rules unless it doesn't count if they never played a game for a school, in his case Florida.Those are the two that the ASU collective is going to have to pay up for, I think, to have a chance to keep them. Rashada staying is not a certainty either.
He never registered for classes so it was like he was never there as I understand itI don't think Rashada can transfer again with the new NCAA rules unless it doesn't count if they never played a game for a school, in his case Florida.
I think that the number might be more like 30 teams, but ASU ain't one of them.Yay, our best player left, and now all our remaining good players are under the microscope with the vultures circling. This is college football now for all but about 10 teams.
They could if they got creative.So basically their is no longer an art to recruiting. Guys known to be top recruiters like Kenny Dillingham are nullified and it comes down to who can pay the most in NIL. I now see why Anderson took the Golden Parachute, ASU is never going to be able to compete financially for blue chip recruits so like many have mentioned ASU will not be among the Top 30 programs for the "Super Conference" we know is coming.
Rashada's dad can be pretty cryptic with his posts and reposts. Maybe it doesn't mean anything.He never registered for classes so it was like he was never there as I understand it
xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
So, I feel like we are well on our way to something like this already and we might be closer than we think. There has been alot of talk during this whole realignment surge the past few years and the consensus is that there will be two major conferences that will ultimately split from the NCAA and basically run their own seasons and championships. Would guess that those two conferences will be the SEC and B1G. Each will cap at 24 teams and those 48 will be the ones competing for the “real” championship.It's getting harder to separate college sports from professional sports.
Maybe there should be divisions based on the amount of money teams pay players through NIL or skip the sham entirely and treat it for what it is, professional sports.
You're painting a grim picture here.So, I feel like we are well on our way to something like this already and we might be closer than we think. There has been alot of talk during this whole realignment surge the past few years and the consensus is that there will be two major conferences that will ultimately split from the NCAA and basically run their own seasons and championships. Would guess that those two conferences will be the SEC and B1G. Each will cap at 24 teams and those 48 will be the ones competing for the “real” championship.
People like to suggest it will be 64 total teams but I think it will be the lower amount. Those two conferences will still schedule out of conference games against Group of 5 teams because of the paydays they can offer. Maybe some of the leftover Power 5 teams will join in on the non conference games.
These super conferences will have salary for all players on the active roster and they will be professional athletes who go to school.
Those two super conferences will then negotiate even better TV deals than before because of their prestige. Everyone left out of this environment will essentially be playing for a lesser championship of some measure.
The Bowl industry will not entirely collapse but there will be a dramatic shakeup of how they are utilized.
A team like ASU probably finds itself on the outside looking in and thus the quality of recruit will drop a little.
All this from my apocalyptic mind
So, I feel like we are well on our way to something like this already and we might be closer than we think. There has been alot of talk during this whole realignment surge the past few years and the consensus is that there will be two major conferences that will ultimately split from the NCAA and basically run their own seasons and championships. Would guess that those two conferences will be the SEC and B1G. Each will cap at 24 teams and those 48 will be the ones competing for the “real” championship.
People like to suggest it will be 64 total teams but I think it will be the lower amount. Those two conferences will still schedule out of conference games against Group of 5 teams because of the paydays they can offer. Maybe some of the leftover Power 5 teams will join in on the non conference games.
These super conferences will have salary for all players on the active roster and they will be professional athletes who go to school.
Those two super conferences will then negotiate even better TV deals than before because of their prestige. Everyone left out of this environment will essentially be playing for a lesser championship of some measure.
The Bowl industry will not entirely collapse but there will be a dramatic shakeup of how they are utilized.
A team like ASU probably finds itself on the outside looking in and thus the quality of recruit will drop a little.
All this from my apocalyptic mind
I don’t think it will fully be based on NIL but there will be a delineation point that is based on it. Teams like Vanderbilt and Northwestern will still be kept in there respective conferences while they may not be paying players at quite the rate of their Tier 1 brethren.I think we are already there, but it has yet to be fully realized. IMO, NIL money will decide divisions.
Things do seem a little grim, particularly from an NIL perspective. Chris Karpman has said that ASU needs at least $3 million in annual NIL money to be competitive from a player personnel perspective for football. He has also said that ASU has nowhere near that, currently. Relegation - one way or another - might be the future. I wonder how many of the BXII schools will be spending at at elite levels the next couple of seasons - guessing a clear minority of them.You're painting a grim picture here.