It means in Football and Basketball things are Even. It’s more about a coach that teach Xs and Os and what program has money. See Ohio State Football 20 million dollar roster. No more Alabama , Georgia and the rest of the SEC dominating College football. Where is the SEC in College Football since NIL? There will be no more coaches at a school for over a Decade and not producing. Fan are giving their hard earned money to College Sports program NIL and we want ROI . It’s sink or swim little fish. Money doesn’t grow on trees. I contributed my money to the collective because I want results . If Brad can’t handle it go do something else . I’m not here for Brad Underwood being a multi millionaire coaching college basketball with no RESULTS. Tell your story walking Brad . Take a Crap or get off the potty is What It’s the NIL era means
To describe a system where richer schools dominate poorer ones by sheer force of spending money as "even" is pretty incredible, but I take your point.
I agree that the NIL world seems to advantage Illinois, particularly on the basketball side, though everything is so new and moving so fast that I retain a healthy degree of uncertainty about where it will all shake out and I take insider claims of our financial superiority with ten boulders of salt.
But then I also firmly agree that old world or new, Illini fans should have high expectations.
I'm as upset about the soft, weak basketball we've played the last month plus as anybody, but when we're coming off of a period in which we had the best record in the Big Ten over a five year period with two (legitimate) Big Ten titles, two BTT titles, and an Elite Eight just last year, I think freaking out over two bad months is pretty ridiculous ESPECIALLY with the added weapon of NIL to buy our way out of problems.
There's just a lot of people looking to take issue with BU, either because of a distaste for him personally (which honestly I somewhat understand, he's kind of a jerk, I wouldn't play for him, but results are results), or because of irrational, illogical overweighting of random tournament results heightened to a fever pitch by our Loyola trauma.
Those things are understandable, but they are also unwise, IMO.