If this proposal is approved the group of 5 would be on the hook for the majority of the cost.
Summary
- The NCAA’s declining authority and the Power 5’s dominance shift financial burdens to smaller conferences.
- The NCAA is facing challenges and limitations in regulating the actions of states and universities.
- Power 5 conferences exerting control over institutional resources create disparity in financial obligations within collegiate sports.
- The future revenue sharing dynamics between Power 4 and other conferences pose further complications.
Broke-Till-Payday’s Perspective
If this proposal is approved the group of 5 would be on the hook for the majority of the cost.
Hey_Its_Roomie’s Insight
I really can’t call what the NCAA has operated on for the past 10 years as incompetence; they’re functionally disabled as an oversight entity. They’ve been bound, gagged, and thrown in a closet from being able to actually do anything. States and universities just serve lawsuits, the Supreme Court has made significant rulings against them already.
You can do a deep dive, and the NCAA’s (both the administration and the schools that form them) stuck their heels in the dirt for decades over some of these issues, but there has been so much out of their control in recent years that you can’t expect them to do anything when entities have made sure they can’t.
Alone_Advantage_961’s Perspective
NCAA lost power in 1984. The last 40 years was them clinging on while slowly being eaten away
KUPSU96’s Take
Your daily reminder that itβs the Power 4 now ππ»
Until next time!
The discourse around the NCAA’s vulnerabilities and the power dynamics within collegiate sports demonstrates a multifaceted landscape of financial distributions. As stakeholders navigate these intricate relationships, the implications on the smaller conferences underscore a larger systemic issue that requires careful consideration and strategic solutions.