by HandDownManDown » Mon Apr 22, 2024 12:32 pm
Although your sarcasm is noted, I’ll give you five predictions.
First, most obvious: high school recruiting by high majors is going to wane as schools look to the portal to fill needs. And by needs I’m not talking about two or three kids, I’m talking about six or so. Replacing half a roster will become the norm, and sub-150 ranked kids will have no choice but to start out at a mid. Which is a dynamic that will gradually be accepted, BTW.
Second, connections and coaching trees will rise in prominence. Along with playing time, where a team’s players have landed and how much they got paid when they did will become selling points. And, a situation where, say, the SoDak St coach can sell being in super tight with Mac will be used to show kids (who as I’ve said now accept the dynamic) that they can get players to the ‘next level’ - except they aren’t talking about the NBA like they used to be.
Third, fan bases aren’t going to like this. In a similar way to guys like Yadi and Pujols being throwbacks that will rarely if ever occur in the future, the number of guys being in a program for more than two years will shrink to the point where when it does happen it’s celebrated rather than being treated as the norm. And as this happens, a certain percentage of the fan base will drift towards indifference. If that percentage liked this dynamic, they’d root for pros. I don’t know what percentage that is but it’ll be significant.
Fourth, I’ll address what prompted my prediction a couple years back that drew your sarcasm: the NCAA. Right up front they threw it to the states to make the rules. Why did they do that? Because they knew if they tried hard to regulate this the moneyed schools would show the NCAA the door. This turned NIL into an out and out arms race where if you were paying attention, you would (should?) have concluded this outcome. The prediction going forward is this: money will call all shots and write all rules regardless of what the NCAA says. Any thoughts about fairness can be dispensed with.
And finally, you can forget about degrees for the most part. Moving this much precludes that, and most schools won’t grant one unless you earned a large chunk of the credits at their institution, often as much as 60 credits. Notice how no one is talking about this? It’s because the powers that be all know it but know it’s a black eye so they’re sweeping it under the rug.
How’d I do?