Cignetti comments about cost of rosters

#1

J C Higgins

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 13, 2017
Messages
1,158
Likes
1,946
#1

Excerpt:

Cignetti, who is 64 years old, claimed that college football is an incredibly expensive market right now, according to Colin McMahon of On3 Sports. While the 2025-26 national champion head coach believes student athletes deserve compensation, he also wants to see some changes made within the next one or two years. Otherwise, he believes college football will no longer exist.

“The market is pretty expensive — it’s scary,” said Cignetti. “It’s scary. I think players should get paid. But something’s going to have to be done in the next 12 to 24 months, or universities might not be able to handle this. College football won’t exist the way we’re going right now.”
 
#6
#6

Excerpt:

Cignetti, who is 64 years old, claimed that college football is an incredibly expensive market right now, according to Colin McMahon of On3 Sports. While the 2025-26 national champion head coach believes student athletes deserve compensation, he also wants to see some changes made within the next one or two years. Otherwise, he believes college football will no longer exist.

“The market is pretty expensive — it’s scary,” said Cignetti. “It’s scary. I think players should get paid. But something’s going to have to be done in the next 12 to 24 months, or universities might not be able to handle this. College football won’t exist the way we’re going right now.”
He ain’t wrong
 
#9
#9
Says the man making 13.2 million per year.
Actually, coaches are worth more than ever now. Instead of having 3 years to develop players into winners, they more often have one year to get players up to speed and able to execute in a new system, and in sync with new teammates.

This is the crappiest time ever to be a college football coach, and I think most are just hanging on until the chaos is back under control.
 
#12
#12
Collective bargaining, with enforceable contracts is the only possible way out of this mess. Tie up the portal with rules and contracts. Pay to play has to be within rigid guidelines. NIL is what it is, but there has to to be some enforceable contracts there, as well.
 
#13
#13
LOL oh Curt, oh buddy. Oh oh buddy. Have I got news for you.
I agree with him, a lot of schools will decide not to get in bidding wars for players. The cost of tickets for the average fan, have become too expensive. I believe you'll start seeing some stadiums have reduced crowds. The current NIL model will destroy college football.
 
#16
#16
I agree with him, a lot of schools will decide not to get in bidding wars for players. The cost of tickets for the average fan, have become too expensive. I believe you'll start seeing some stadiums have reduced crowds. The current NIL model will destroy college football.

The "average" fan probably hasn't been to a game in years honestly. On these message boards, you see the folks who are more the diehards.

When we sucked, then yeah people were giving away tickets. Basically anyone who could make it to Neyland by game time and wanted a ticket could probably buy one for most games pretty cheaply.

After COVID, everything changed. We got decent again and the crowds returned. Probably 80% orlf the UT fans on attendance for any gane these days has made the season ticket plunge.
 
#20
#20
Yep, it’s getting a little out of control, and not just in college football.

I remember when a young soldier took his signing bonus and then got “homesick” right before we deployed…
oh, wait, that never happened!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beagle Bill
#21
#21
Everyone wants contracts and regulations then the same people will scream "I'm not going to support an NFL Lite pro league."

It's as if you don't understand what contracts, salary caps, free agency rules, etc mean.

If the players are paid employees with contracts, you will create a pro league with everything you hate about pro sports. That's better?
 
  • Like
Reactions: sami

Advertisement



Back
Top