Crazy that college players are making 4x the rookie minimum in the NFL.
It is extremely nuts. This is professional athletics. If you describe it any other way, you are on crack cocaine or are in utter denial.
ESPN took this to another level with college football. The coaches demanded higher pay, and they got it.
Now utter and complete C-U-N-T-S like Nick Saban and his administrators, who recieved multi-generational wealth. At the same time, coaching by not paying players and now have multi-generational wealth-worthy TV contracts bitching about the new era. Frankly, I find them tiresome. They got otherworldly rich by utterly exploiting a wacky system: total exploration. Now, players are getting theirs and don't like it too much. Coaches that bitch about it should be fired, and players shouldn't play for them because it reveals their character.
I love universities like USC that are now saddled with people like Lincoln Riley and his 110 million contract. They would have to pay 90 million dollars to get out of it. It is hilarious and sick at the same time. F' em.
Go look at OU's planned strategic investments, which are half or more dedicated to athletics. It is utterly disgusting. They aren't asking their donors to build robotics, AI, or molecular biology facilities. No, there is more and more basketball, football, and other related support things to "compete." It is all out there right on the internet.
You, the taxpayer, pay for one year of multi-million dollar rentals of Jackson Arnold. This hilarious part is that Brent Venables will get fired because he chose Jackson Arnold over Dillion Gabriel. How did that ding-dong not know he couldn't throw? Was it not obvious? If it wasn't, he needs to be gone. Unfortunately, that coach's exit number is significant and substantial.
The rumour is that Quinn Ewers is getting offers for 4 million to play football for one year. You, the taxpayer, are getting to foot these kinds of bills. Most of these programs kick back less than a million or two to the universities. When they ask Norman and the state to contribute a billion dollars in facilities, paying off their investments will only take 500-1000 years. But I am being super generous because that doesn't include the interest on the bonds they float to pay for the facilities.
I digress.