No.If true, that makes more sense on why they are so good. Same with TX tech.
Do we have a mark Cuban? 60 million a year is a ton.
spot on. Coaching as well as great organizational people, hard work from all, and dedication towards winning. Love it that they nay sayers have been proven wrong.Based on their very non-star-powered roster (obviously excluding Mendoza, but even he wasn't the highest priced transfer), it wasn't on players. That's three times what OSU reportedly pays. For the 25th ranked transfer class and recruiting classes ranked 48th, 64th, and 68th starting in 2025 and going back? I'm surprised Cuban isn't going bankrupt with this kind of funding and who besides Mendoza from these modestly ranked classes are winning this lottery?
Or, maybe, just maybe their success has less to do with a mythical and astronomical payroll and more to do with COACHING. Less about names like Cuban and more to do with names like Cignetti?
They must have spent 100 years building a war chest while being historically bad, like almost Vandy level bad, all while waiting for this moment.Saw something where IU has more resources than anyone in the SEC other than Texas.
While it may mean more, the tide may leaning toward the resources the top 4 in the Big 10 have. (OSU, Michigan, Indiana, Penn St)
I also heard that USC and UCLA donors are more geared toward philanthropy than athletics.
From most reports cubannisnt their big donor. He gives a lot to the university but he made a donation to the FB program this year. It wasn’t 60 milCuban spending that kind of money when there’s homeless people suffering is very wrong(according to him in other situations).
Having superstars or a boatload of 5 stars is a winning solution for some, but every so often a team like IU pops up who has a coach able to coach up marginally lesser talent. And has a lot of kids who are highly motivated, fit their roles and positions to a tee and are able to execute the coaches system at a very high level. A level in which that execution is able to overcome the superstars athleticism when huge games are on the line. Brains vs. Braun so to speak. It’s what we can hope Stein can accomplish here to some degree. IU has hit that perfect combination the past couple of seasons. The trick will be seeing if they can maintain it long term. If they can Cignetti is a Hall of Famer.spot on. Coaching as well has great organizational people, hard work from all, and dedication towards winning. Love it that they nay sayers have been proven wrong.
At least from what I read, the $60 million wasn’t all NIL, it was for facilities, upgrades, etc, plus staff and NIL, so I don’t believe it’s an annual thing. Who knows it could be, or could be more, but that’s just what I read.If true, that makes more sense on why they are so good. Same with TX tech.
Do we have a mark Cuban? 60 million a year is a ton.
Sorry 5 million was technology center and read 6 million to rugby only thing I could findThink he donated 5 million to football
I would think the 60 mil is a sum total if numerous donations, revenue sharing and University investment.From most reports cubannisnt their big donor. He gives a lot to the university but he made a donation to the FB program this year. It wasn’t 60 mil
Yeah, that social inclusion won’t win football games but they don’t like it out there anywaySaw something where IU has more resources than anyone in the SEC other than Texas.
While it may mean more, the tide may leaning toward the resources the top 4 in the Big 10 have. (OSU, Michigan, Indiana, Penn St)
I also heard that USC and UCLA donors are more geared toward philanthropy than athletics.
College athletics needs a salary cap and transparent structure or it will be like mlb.
The cap allows different teams, with the right coaching staff to elevate.
Joe’s net worth is now $2B. His last name starts with a C. Craft.Mark Cuban net worth 6 billion
Joe Kraft net worth 1.5 billion
Texas Tech bound.Heard today the QB from Cincinnata going to Texas $4 million
Joe’s net worth is now $2B. His last name starts with a C. Craft.
Everyone not able to spend big wants a cap. A cap makes sense, unless you have the big money to outspend everyone.College athletics needs a salary cap and transparent structure or it will be like mlb.
The cap allows different teams, with the right coaching staff to elevate.
How would anyone know what Cuban or Craft's net worth is at the moment? It fluctuates daily and both of them own interest in private companies which are notoriously difficult to value.Joe’s net worth is now $2B. His last name starts with a C. Craft.
Is that like second round money in the NFL?Heard today the QB from Cincinnata going to Texas $4 million
Facility upgrades. Gave head coach 10 mil. DC 2.5. It isn’t on NIL.I keep reading there’s a cap on NIL. So how is a CFB team spending supposedly spending $60 million?
Texas Tech’s main donor is pushing the score act. Supposedly they’re one of the top spenders.Everyone not able to spend big wants a cap. A cap makes sense, unless you have the big money to outspend everyone.
it is difficult to see IU spend more and say more money did not factor into their success. OSU outspends most teams, as well. Buying college sports has traditionally had an impact on the game.
I keep reading there’s a cap on NIL. So how is a CFB team spending supposedly spending $60 million?
Texas? To sit behind Manning?Heard today the QB from Cincinnata going to Texas $4 million
Saw something where IU has more resources than anyone in the SEC other than Texas.
While it may mean more, the tide may leaning toward the resources the top 4 in the Big 10 have. (OSU, Michigan, Indiana, Penn St)
I also heard that USC and UCLA donors are more geared toward philanthropy than athletics.
The best part about all of this is it’s going to eventually completely destroy college athletics to where it has to be rebuilt from the ground up.
teams aren’t going to keep trying to compete with the 7 or 8 programs that can actually afford to spend the kind of money they need to win a title so schools will either set caps and make it law or they’ll be divisions no different than high schools have for classifications.
In a six class system I’d say Kentucky would be lucky to be the equivalent of a 4A school in terms of money spent in football.
well unless you count Barney and stoops contract
this is why the old system worked so well. Players were getting paid. In the form of scholarships. Now I’m perfectly fine with a player getting an endorsement deal using their likeness. No issues with the outside sources. But there’s absolutely no reason schools should be actively playing players like their free agents. We should just scrap college sports all together and just send them straight to a minor league pro team if that’s the case