Interest Decline in College Football?

My fandom for the sport isn’t what it used to be. I think I started losing interest prior to the 2019 season. Turning 25 definitely had something to do with it. Less idealism, better perspectives and all that.


And the other 120+ FBS teams need to quit picking their ass and start pulling their own weight ffs.
I can’t get over the portal and NIL. I see a place for both but the way they are being executed is insane.

I won’t ever not love the sport but I’m not near as fired up as I used to be.
 
The issues is the regionality of High School Football. Some parts of the country are just not great recruiting hot beds anymore.

Also Nick Saban has sucked the life out of CFB to a degree due to his dominant run at Alabama. Even in the years they don't win, like this past year, it almost feels like they are upset more than losing legitimately. For example, they were missing their two best WR in the National Title game which dominated in Atlanta earlier that season.

When Nick Saban retires, I think it will help. However, it will still be Southern focused for the foreseeable future.
 
parity is coming some...

SEC and the good USC teams were paying players for years and people knowingly looked away. NIL allows those teams that weren't competing to complete by paying players.

Loyalty is gone (do you really think Casey Thompson is at Nebraska if he isn't making six figures?)
 
It matters everywhere, but the SEC just has so many built in advantages when it comes to recruiting. Florida, Texas and Georgia are all in the SEC's footprint and those are 3 of the most talent rich states in the country, and the gulf coast states produce a lot of talent relative to their population as well.

Ohio State and Penn State have advantages over the other B1G programs due to in state talent, and Ohio State is a big enough brand to be able to recruit nationally, but for whatever reason, much of the midwest just doesn't produce a lot of talent.

The west coast is very much a fairweather area. I remember USC used to play in a packed stadium under Carroll, but they might have had 10,000 there for homecoming this year. Get USC go on a playoff run and the west coast interest will be back in gear.

But nationally, I understand why a lot of people decided to not watch the NCG. They just saw those two teams play each other a month prior, and neither were met with any kind of resistance in the semis, and people outside of SEC land are tired of the SEC, and there's Bama fatigue as well.

I wouldn't be shocked if it was the highest viewed sporting event in Georgia ever, but Georgia doesn't really have a national brand.

I guess it's really more of a south thing than just the SEC, Ohio State is the only team not in the south to win a natty since 2005, and it was just one, so in 16 years, 15 of them have been won by a team from the south. To get more national interest back, teams from other regions need to start winning, and it's easier said than done. USC keeping Cali kids in Cali would help. I mean, Bryce Young won the Heisman for Bama and he's from Cali and Brock Bowers was the best TE in the country as a true freshman and he's from Cali.
Also a huge piece is the overall numbers of blacks living in southeastern states. Blacks make up the major majority of skill position players and I think these kids prefer to stay in the south where they're comfortable and where they're near family.
Black Population by State 2022
 
Also a huge piece is the overall numbers of blacks living in southeastern states. Blacks make up the major majority of skill position players
thats racist GIF
 
parity is coming some...

SEC and the good USC teams were paying players for years and people knowingly looked away. NIL allows those teams that weren't competing to complete by paying players.

Loyalty is gone (do you really think Casey Thompson is at Nebraska if he isn't making six figures?)
All teams were paying players. It wasn't just Bama, Clemson, LSU, tOSU, OU, and UGA who were dropping bags. UTjr proves this theory wrong.

Now that everyone will pay players above board, it will go back to who can get you to the NFL, who can win a natty, which schools are the cool schools with great culture.

Having said that, I hope it will have some leveling effect. Perhaps it's because you can only pay so much, so often.
 
I've seen players at OU get "benefits" for a helluva long time. It used to be extra money from ticket sales and the occasional $100 handshake. Then it turned into cars and wuss no-show jobs. I've also see a LOT of players at OU actually work hard for their money during the offseason in construction jobs, oilfield jobs, etc. And yeah that includes the studs too. But now it's a whole different world. I'm friends with a lot of guys who played at OU and it's a pretty small percentage who condones this Wild West Show in CFB. It's not envy either. They just feel the game's going to be changed so much none of us are going to recognize it. Not all change is for the better, in their opinion, if some guardrails aren't put into place PRONTO. I agree. I'm already getting turned off by some of this stuff. But when former players are shaking their heads it's a sign that not everything is as great as some posters on here are making it out to be.
 
I've seen players at OU get "benefits" for a helluva long time. It used to be extra money from ticket sales and the occasional $100 handshake. Then it turned into cars and wuss no-show jobs. I've also see a LOT of players at OU actually work hard for their money during the offseason in construction jobs, oilfield jobs, etc. And yeah that includes the studs too. But now it's a whole different world. I'm friends with a lot of guys who played at OU and it's a pretty small percentage who condones this Wild West Show in CFB. It's not envy either. They just feel the game's going to be changed so much none of us are going to recognize it. Not all change is for the better, in their opinion, if some guardrails aren't put into place PRONTO. I agree. I'm already getting turned off by some of this stuff. But when former players are shaking their heads it's a sign that not everything is as great as some posters on here are making it out to be.
partly agree, partly think it is sour grapes. Just as NFL players from 70's and 80's talk trash about players today not caring about the logo/helmet and only about the $$$. They too would be about the $$$ today if given the chance.
 
My interest went up the last 3-4 years due mainly to the shit job Scott Frost is doing in Lincoln...and the slow emergence of lesser conferences getting into the playoffs when a really good TEAM comes around once in a while.
 
My interest went up the last 3-4 years due mainly to the shit job Scott Frost is doing in Lincoln...and the slow emergence of lesser conferences getting into the playoffs when a really good TEAM comes around once in a while.
once in a while? they come along more often than that but they only give them credit if they do it more than 1 year and have a higher bar to reach than others.
 
I can’t get over the portal and NIL. I see a place for both but the way they are being executed is insane.
Hello, is this Dabo Swinney I'm speaking to right now?!
 
Been that way forever tho.
There's always been 4 or 5 schools per generation that are dominant.

When I first started watching Football (1990s), that wasn't true.

You had Nebraska, Tennessee, Florida, Florida State, Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, Miami, Notre Dame, Alabama, Auburn, Kansas State, and others that were very good. Heck, the Pac12 tended to have a different power each year with USC, UCLA, the Arizona Schools, Washington, and Oregon all taking turns.

Georgia Tech and even Syracuse had decent teams as well. The only programs that were majorly down during that period were LSU, Oklahoma, and Texas but even they had some success.
 
Also a huge piece is the overall numbers of blacks living in southeastern states. Blacks make up the major majority of skill position players and I think these kids prefer to stay in the south where they're comfortable and where they're near family.
Black Population by State 2022
Meh. NY: 3.7 million. GA: 3.5 million.
Down here we just eat better. :noidea:
 
When I first started watching Football (1990s), that wasn't true.

You had Nebraska, Tennessee, Florida, Florida State, Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, Miami, Notre Dame, Alabama, Auburn, Kansas State, and others that were very good. Heck, the Pac12 tended to have a different power each year with USC, UCLA, the Arizona Schools, Washington, and Oregon all taking turns.

Georgia Tech and even Syracuse had decent teams as well. The only programs that were majorly down during that period were LSU, Oklahoma, and Texas but even they had some success.
gonna need your definition of dominant and very good with those teams u listed
 
We showed UGA how to beat Bama. You're welcome.
i would bet everything i had that UGA learned more losing 41-24 to Alabama than anything A&M did
 
My interest went up the last 3-4 years due mainly to the shit job Scott Frost is doing in Lincoln...and the slow emergence of lesser conferences getting into the playoffs when a really good TEAM comes around once in a while.
jon-stewart-cursing.gif
 
gonna need your definition of dominant and very good with those teams u listed

Well if you go off National Titles alone, here is the 1990s:

1990: Colorado and Georgia Tech
1991: Miami and Washington
1992: Alabama
1993: Florida State (Auburn was unbeaten but on probation)
1994: Nebraska, Penn State
1995: Nebraska
1996: Florida
1997: Nebraska and Michigan
1998: Tennessee
1999: Florida State
2000: Oklahoma

That is 12 different teams (13 if you count unbeaten Auburn. Also Ohio State was regularly in contention and Kansas State and UCLA were in contention in 1998 so you could argue up to 16 teams)

Far greater parity than today.
 
I love these honks who praise the way NIL/Transfer Portal is going to change everything for the better and then turn around and whine about how there are just a handful of teams that have a realistic shot at the NC.

Talk about cognitive dissonance.
 
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