Post by SouthernYokel on Dec 21, 2020 10:32:49 GMT -5
i should gracefully bow out of the Gasparilla bowl so Army can play somewhere. it's pretty dumb that a 9-2 team in a G5 conference that wants to play can't even get a third tier game when a bunch of very shitty SEC teams are playing extremely reluctantly.
i should gracefully bow out of the Gasparilla bowl so Army can play somewhere. it's pretty dumb that a 9-2 team in a G5 conference that wants to play can't even get a third tier game when a bunch of very shitty SEC teams are playing extremely reluctantly.
I suspect that everyone is just doing it now for the extra practice time.
Isn't it a little racist to call it Black Friday? - Joy Behar
i should gracefully bow out of the Gasparilla bowl so Army can play somewhere. it's pretty dumb that a 9-2 team in a G5 conference that wants to play can't even get a third tier game when a bunch of very shitty SEC teams are playing extremely reluctantly.
I suspect that everyone is just doing it now for the extra practice time.
probably, but i don't even have that excuse as my current coaching staff is out the door.
Since we have an actual National Championship tournament now, why do we still have these other garbage bowls?
Because it's fun to watch football and bowls have to line their pockets.
Dumb question: Whose pockets are actually lined by the bowl games? NCAA? Conferences? Schools? All of the above? I know it's all a big money grab, but the logistics of who actually gets paid in this giant pyramid scheme you call a sport have aways confused me.
Because it's fun to watch football and bowls have to line their pockets.
Dumb question: Whose pockets are actually lined by the bowl games? NCAA? Conferences? Schools? All of the above? I know it's all a big money grab, but the logistics of who actually gets paid in this giant pyramid scheme you call a sport have aways confused me.
As I've always understood it, the committee that runs the individual bowl games. Certainly the conferences and ncaa get money from the TV contracts but the real grift is with the locals who run the bowls.
Dumb question: Whose pockets are actually lined by the bowl games? NCAA? Conferences? Schools? All of the above? I know it's all a big money grab, but the logistics of who actually gets paid in this giant pyramid scheme you call a sport have aways confused me.
As I've always understood it, the committee that runs the individual bowl games. Certainly the conferences and ncaa get money from the TV contracts but the real grift is with the locals who run the bowls.
As I've always understood it, the committee that runs the individual bowl games. Certainly the conferences and ncaa get money from the TV contracts but the real grift is with the locals who run the bowls.