Money can make a lot of things happen. You can’t purchase history, culture or a prominent football brand in a relatively concise period of time. People can insist that’s old fashioned thinking, and to a degree it is - I get that. But those things exist in spades elsewhere in the football world beyond Bloomington, Indiana. Of course, they may not matter to some recruits. They may not matter to Curt Cignetti. They still matter to a lot of people. NIL resources have made a massive splash and undoubtedly changed the game, but it’s not some infinity-gauntlet that has instantly erased the scales of power in the college football universe…yetWhy? Indiana has the 13th biggest athletic department budget (source USA Today)
Thank you! We're a month out and right now, I'm just hoping yelling at the Illini isn't what sends me into labor
Congrats!Much more personal pick me up, but one of my friends from college who still works for Illinois sent me this sweater for our soon-to-arrive baby girl. (The John Deere teether was included on her parents' advice. I can't stop grinning at both items.)
Happy for you! God bless your family.Thank you! We're a month out and right now, I'm just hoping yelling at the Illini isn't what sends me into labor![]()
That teether is something! A little piece of Moline for your little one when she arrives.Much more personal pick me up, but one of my friends from college who still works for Illinois sent me this sweater for our soon-to-arrive baby girl. (The John Deere teether was included on her parents' advice. I can't stop grinning at both items.)
Been here long enough to know that I will absolutely yell because of them. Just depends on if it's out of joy or frustration. For baby girl's sake, I'm hoping it's out of joyThat teether is something! A little piece of Moline for your little one when she arrives.
I also enjoyed your subsequent comment that you hope that yelling at the Illini doesn't send you into labor. It's not "IF the Illini do something that causes me to blow a gasket." No, that's inevitable....you just just hope your reaction doesn't have knock-on effects!!
I just meant that it is more likely that the pockets are much deeper at some historical powers in college football to pay top dollar across the board for coaches, staff, players, etc than there is in Bloomington. I'd imagine lots of the IU faithful are happy with their success but would still rather be good in hoops vs football & invest accordingly. Maybe the mega deal isn't what drives Cignetti which could factor into him staying.Why? Indiana has the 13th biggest athletic department budget (source USA Today)
Kat's daughter in therapist's office c. 2050:Been here long enough to know that I will absolutely yell because of them. Just depends on if it's out of joy or frustration. For baby girl's sake, I'm hoping it's out of joy![]()
Obviously anything is possible but for some modern perspective Indiana currently pays their football coach more than Florida doesI just meant that it is more likely that the pockets are much deeper at some historical powers in college football to pay top dollar across the board for coaches, staff, players, etc than there is in Bloomington. I'd imagine lots of the IU faithful are happy with their success but would still rather be good in hoops vs football & invest accordingly. Maybe the mega deal isn't what drives Cignetti which could factor into him staying.
Nothing in his background suggests a deep connection to IU that could trump $$. All his experience prior to there is out east or down south. I just suspect if a FL, Clemson get in a bidding war for a football coach, IU will scream mercy before they would. A lot of that is based on historical perception.
And it's why FSU (and Clemson) were throwing fits as realignment shook out and left them further behind. They'd have been coveted targets were it not for the bet they placed on an outlandishly long media rights contract.That was in response to a poster saying it’s “untenable for Indiana to compete with Clemson and Florida.”
Indiana has a bigger budget than Clemson and is in the Big Ten whereas Clemson is likely locked out of the BT and SEC and likely long term in a conference competing with Wake Forest and Syracuse and UConn with less than 50% of the TV revenue as Indiana. I don’t think it’s untenable for Indiana to compete with the programs in the ranks of 10-25 in the new era of college football.
This, your only contribution to the board in the last week, is just a complaint about what other people are posting about.Hmmm... is it easier for Cignetti to win a NC at Indiana or Florida? The correct answer is:
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Brian Kelly left Notre Dame for LSU because he wanted more talent and didn’t think he could win the national title at ND.I am not certain that you can make a definitive statement like that. There is no data in the new college landscape that can prove this point without a doubt.
What might be lost is that these major programs like Bama, Georgia, etc. always had extremely high-end talent that would wait a year or two to become the starters. With NIL the way it is, that talent has no clear incentive to simply wait for their turn. If anything, we are seeing a great equalizing across the country, where very solid coaching is imperative (look at Clemson's falloff recently as an example).
In the new landscape, the right coach can bring in talent to his system and succeed at virtually any major program in the SEC/B1G (provided they receive the right support). Given lower expectations at a place like IU compared to Bama, I think it actually might be easier to win at IU (less second guessing by the entire fanbase over every little thing).
And yet ND has come far closer to winning a title than LSU has since that happened.Brian Kelly left Notre Dame for LSU because he wanted more talent and didn’t think he could win the national title at ND.