Sure, then go to the facts that Illinois has rode the coattails of OSU football for a long long time. That's a fact. 2026 isn't impressed with 1920's & 1950's football.
If Illinois can pay Altmyer and Jacas more than Clayton Leonard, why should OSU be paid equivalent as everyone else? As BB said, this isn't charity when it comes to his roster building. The same applies to the B1G programs as well.
You can read the Illinois arrogance in this thread. It's tough for the arrogant to deal with.
Seems like you’re now shifting your argument from number of programs supported, effectively just 2 at each school, to payment per athlete or history? I don’t follow this new line of reasoning but it seems peripheral to the main concern voiced on this thread.
Fundamental competitive fairness is the thing. I don’t sense any Illini arrogance, just concern for tilting the playing field against us as well as the other 14 lesser schools.
This deal doesn’t just lock in the big spenders’ current financial advantage. It fuels
acceleration of the gap over time as their success generates more revenue, allowing them to buy and attract even more talent, bringing more success, and so on. The result is a sub-conference of “NFL Light” within the 18 team conference, as described by
@the juiceman cometh above. Longer term it undermines the B1G vs the SEC.
Maybe B1G sees it as a way to grow a few super teams to dominate the CFP? The risk is fans of the underfunded teams will see the growing inequity, sense the futility, and move on to other interests. The NFL recognized the threat and addressed it with salary caps, while the B1G and NCAA seem either blind to the risk or legally paralyzed.
Spend all you like on facilities and even on staff, but please find a way to cap each team’s player salary pool to avoid an accelerated concentration of talent, further tilting an already uneven playing field. Can anyone come up with an argument against a salary cap?