#1DieHardHawk
Well-Known Member
This is what worries me personally about what might happen in terms of my interest level. I hate the thought of losing my enthusiasm for college sports. That's been a huge part of my identity, and one of a handful of things from which I derive pleasure, forever.Yeah that's the part that I think is universally tough to swallow for us older fans. Growing up seeing generations of teams and players that goes for the other sports too. Rosters being flipped over yr to yr and your star players that either pop up early on and leave or you bring them in for 1 yr and then leave is just not fun. You can't get invested in them.
A fun part of fandom for me has always been seeing us land a recruit and then follow their development. Be it they flash early and turn into a star or more gradually and then they have a monster senior yr. That's kinda what's always made a guy a Hawkeye to me be it hoops or football. While that kinda happens in football a little bit now it doesn't like it used to. And it certainly doesn't in hoops.
When NIL and the portal came along and began gathering momentum, I admittedly had a sick feeling in my stomach. It dawned on me that I had walked away from MLB and the NBA due to the revolving door of players. The joy from a fan standpoint was following the "teams" year after year as they developed, with young guys added via the draft and the occasional trade or free agent signing. In many ways, that familiarity with the players and the stability IMO is what drives the passion of being a fan.
Frankly, it scares me thinking that I may lose that with college sports.
From a strictly legal standpoint, the only feasible way to make all of this work without violating anti-trust law is having the players form a formal "player's association," which would allow for collective bargaining and contracts to be signed protecting both parties, all under some type of salary cap to level the playing field. One of the "boiler plate" tenants would be limiting player's abilities to transfer at will without financial repercussions.
It stings losing the amateur nature of college sports, but, at least in that scenario, you would see some stability and accountability. Right now, it's a complete free for all.