I think the calculus on coaching at a blue blood has changed a bit. I don't think the job itself is any easier or harder than it used to be because most blue blood programs have NIL that is good enough. The thing that's changed is how the elite coaches themselves view the attractiveness of the blue blood schools.
In the '90s it was a huge advantage. Program prestige mattered to kids, the resources were better, etc. That made it easier to get the elite players and coaches would jump at the opportunity.
It's not like that anymore. You don't need to be at a blue blood program to win big. Bennett, Drew, Oats, Pearl, and Beard have all proven that at non-powerhouse basketball schools. A guy like Drew and stay at Baylor for the rest of this career, get paid very well, deal with low expectations, and have the court named after him when he retires. Short of scandal he's probably not getting fired. Going to a blue blood for him is just more pressure and more aggravation with almost zero additional benefit expect maybe a better salary.
In 2025 I don't think the pressure and expectations of coaching at a blue blood are worth it for the vast majority of coaches unless the coach has a previous tie to the program.