ToasterOverlord

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
cfb
 
  1. Texas
  2. Georgia
  3. Ohio State
  4. Alabama
  5. Tennessee (+1)
  6. Ole Miss (-1)
  7. Miami (+1)
  8. Oregon (+1)
  9. Penn State (+1)
  10. Utah (+2)
  11. Missouri (-4)
  12. Michigan (+6)
  13. USC (-2)
  14. LSU (+2)
  15. Louisville (+4)
  16. Notre Dame (+1)
  17. Clemson (+4)
  18. Iowa State (+2)
  19. Illinois (+5)
  20. Oklahoma State (-6)
  21. oklahoma (-6)
  22. BYU (new)
  23. Kansas State (-10)
  24. Texas A&M (+1)
  25. Boise State (new)

Others receiving votes: Washington State, Indiana, Boston College, UNLV, Pitt, Nebraska, Iowa, JMU, South Carolina, Liberty, Arkansas, UCF, Arizona, SMU, Navy

Dropped out: Nebraska, Northern Illinois

 

With all the talking heads on TV proclaiming that this season is unlike any other, I'm curious how the community feels. Totally new landscape of CFB or just more of the same? How do we all feel about:

  • Helmet communication (for only 1 player on the field per team except on free kicks)
  • Tablets on the sidelines (up to 18 per team)
  • The 2 minute timeout
  • Corporate logos on fields (no longer requires the stadium to be named after the sponsor)
  • New homes for Arizona, ASU, Cal, CU, Oregon, ou, SMU, Stanford, Texas, UCLA, USC, Utah, Washington
  • Expanded playoff (probably too early to tell on this one)
  • New TV deals (SEC on ABC, B1G on CBS)
  • Current season of Fansville (Ewers could be a Heisman candidate but he sure won't be winning any Oscars)

For reference, here are the P4 vs P4 records so far:

  • ACC: 6-8
  • B1G: 5-5 (or 5-6 if counting ND)
  • Big XII: 5-6
  • SEC: 8-5 (or 8-6 if counting ND)
 

Rendering in the article.

Kind of cool that it's exclusively a student section, but the end zone is kind of a crummy section. Although I suppose it would be foolish to try to sell premium seats in a spot with such a bad view. Gee, I don't know any program that would do that... (FWIW, I can't stand Texas's new south end zone and this one by USF is giving off the same vibes)

 

The newsworthy part of the article:

The University of Tennessee will increase football ticket prices and the required donations that accompany them by an average of 14.5% in 2025 with most of the new cost going to a “talent fee” to pay players.

...

Here’s the breakdown of the average 14.5% price increase of tickets at Neyland Stadium in 2025:

  • Initial average increase of 4.5% per seat on single-game tickets and season tickets plus donations. Some will be higher, some lower. That increase accounts for UT’s rising costs for construction, food, travel and other athletic department expenses.
  • An additional 10% increase per seat on all single-game tickets and season tickets plus donations as a “talent fee” to fund the revenue-sharing pool for athletes coming as early as 2025.
  • Season ticket renewals will begin Thursday, and the renewal deadline is Feb. 27, 2025. UT is offering a 10-month payment plan to help fans absorb the cost increase.

UT already doubled student ticket prices from $10 to $20 this season, and they’ll go up to $25 in 2025.

Paying Tennessee players, extra scholarships could cost $30 million

The details of revenue sharing aren’t known yet because they’re contingent on the settlement of the House v. NCAA federal antitrust case, which is still amid negotiations. Revenue sharing could go into effect as early as July 2025.

But generally, schools will have the option of funding up to 22% of their annual revenue, or about $22 million, to pay athletes. It could work sort of like a salary cap for college sports, but that structure is also murky.

All SEC and Big Ten schools are expected to opt in to the revenue-sharing model, and some schools from weaker conferences will attempt to keep pace.

Paying athletes for their name, image and likeness could still be a factor in landing and retaining top players. But NIL’s place in a revenue-sharing model is uncertain.

The cap on scholarships also will rise as early as July 2025. Football can go from 85 scholarships to 105. Baseball can go from 11.7 scholarships to 35, and so on.

Many schools won’t be able to fund those extra scholarships unless they drop some sports.

For schools like UT that are opting in, it will require about $30 million annually to both fund revenue sharing and additional scholarships. That’s where UT's ticket price hike comes in.

“It’s really a $30 million-plus math problem,” White said. “We’re not just offloading it to our fans. We are asking them to help us with a portion of it.”

How ticket price hike will fund portion of player pay

UT estimates the 10% ticket price increase for a “talent fee” will account for $7.5 million, or about one-third of the annual $22 million revenue-sharing pool to pay athletes.

...

And the whole second half of the article dissolves into fluff that is mostly blowing smoke up the AD's ass (nothing against the other UT, but being the highest paid AD in the country while asking for money is simply risible)

 
  1. Texas (+1)
  2. Georgia (-1)
  3. Ohio State
  4. Alabama
  5. Ole Miss
  6. Tennessee (+1)
  7. Missouri (-1)
  8. Miami (+2)
  9. Oregon
  10. Penn State (-2)
  11. USC
  12. Utah
  13. Kansas State (+1)
  14. Oklahoma State (-1)
  15. oklahoma
  16. LSU
  17. Notre Dame (+1)
  18. Michigan (-1)
  19. Louisville
  20. Iowa State (+1)
  21. Clemson (+1)
  22. Nebraska (+1)
  23. Northern Illinois (+2)
  24. Illinois (new)
  25. Texas A&M (new)

Others receiving votes: Memphis, Boise State, Syracuse, UNLV, Boston College, Washington State, Arizona, Iowa, Cal, Liberty, Toledo, UCF, South Carolina, UNC, Arizona State, BYU, Pitt

Dropped out: Arizona, Boston College

 

From the article:

According to Rivals’ UGA Sports, Harris was cited for numerous offenses, including having no proof of insurance, materials that reduce visibility on his windows or windshield, driving without a seatbelt, having an unregistered vehicle and reckless driving. He was released shortly before midnight after posting the $10 bail on each charge.

Per the incident report obtained by the Athens Banner-Herald, Harris was cited for going over 100 MPH while passing two other cars in the rain.

...

Harris is also at least the sixth player to be arrested for a driving offense in 2024.

...

Harris has seen significant playing time through the first two weeks of the season. The sophomore has recorded four tackles in the wins over Clemson and Tennessee Tech, and it’s unclear how Thursday night will affect his status for the team’s game against Kentucky on Saturday.

 

In Iowa State football kicker Kyle Konrardy's case, "the spoils" are 54 boxes of Pop-Tarts. On Tuesday, the Football Writers Association of America named the redshirt freshman's last-minute 54-yard kick to beat Iowa the Pop-Tarts "Crazy Good" Play of the Week.

As a prize for Konrardy, the Pop-Tarts Bowl, which annually features a team from the Big 12 taking on a team from the ACC, sent Konrardy plenty of pastries to keep him and his teammates fueled throughout the upcoming bye week.

The Cyclones (2-0) also changed their profile picture on X. Instead of a celebration shot from the team's Cy-Hawk win over its biggest rival, they opted for something more subtle. Now, whenever Iowa State football posts something, followers are greeted with a photo of Konrardy staring at the camera, holding about 13 boxes of pop tarts.

 
  1. Georgia
  2. Texas (+1)
  3. Ohio State (-1)
  4. Alabama
  5. Ole Miss (+1)
  6. Missouri (+3)
  7. Tennessee (+7)
  8. Penn State
  9. Oregon (-2)
  10. Miami (+2)
  11. USC (+2)
  12. Utah (-1)
  13. Oklahoma State (+3)
  14. Kansas State (+3)
  15. oklahoma
  16. LSU (+2)
  17. Michigan (-7)
  18. Notre Dame (-13)
  19. Louisville (+3)
  20. Arizona
  21. Iowa State (new)
  22. Clemson (+3)
  23. Nebraska (new)
  24. Boston College (new)
  25. Northern Illinois (new)

Others receiving votes: Illinois, Boise State, TAMU, Syracuse, Memphis, Washington, Iowa, Kansas, Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Liberty, Wisconsin, UNLV, UNC, Cal, BYU, UCF, TCU

Dropped out: Kansas, Iowa, Georgia Tech, NC State

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

User flair. I know it's probably not that high on the list for most who might see it as a gimmick, but it's almost essential for sports discussion to know what team a user supports. I'm sure many other communities have compelling reasons as well.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We've grown by almost 200 subscribers in the last week and there's always room for more!

probably the most active gridiron football community on Lemmy

No probably about it, and not even just gridiron football. A quick search on lemmyverse.net shows we have more weekly active users than even [email protected] (the biggest soccer community)

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Hey all, I'm from the Fanaticus instance. Not going to try to persuade anyone to switch, just wanted to offer my thoughts:

I see advantages to both communities. The fact that there is a cfb community here on the "default" instance, so to speak, means it will probably be found by newbies to the fediverse. On the other hand, if it's inactive or if lemmy.world is down (which was the case when I migrated to Lemmy), I don't know how good user retention will be. What I like about the Fanaticus instance is because it's only sports, threads are less likely to get downvoted or passed over by non-sports folks (which, let's be frank, is the majority of Lemmy users). Plus, team communities can all be in one place.

It would be nice if both communities could coexist and grow. As you've noted, that requires active mods. I definitely plan to be active on Fanaticus daily, but I can't speak for anyone else. I'm also open to cross-posting content to this instance. That works for news and even OC, but I agree it would be ideal to settle on one place for discussions (e.g. game threads and polls). Because I only found this community recently, I'm fine with submitting my poll to whichever instance can reach a bigger audience.

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