Ep 1105 - Football Seating Changes, NBA Draft Success, and more - podcast episode cover

Ep 1105 - Football Seating Changes, NBA Draft Success, and more

Jun 30, 20241 hr 5 min
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Episode description

Scott and Galen reunite on the last day of June to talk about a bunch of IU and college sports related things. Included in the show is a discussion of Scott’s latest wine excursions, the shifting football seating arrangements, IU’s NBA draft success, and some more on the changing NIL landscape.

Transcript

You're listening to the Back Home Network presented by Home Field Apparel. Welcome back to Crimson Cask Ale and Clavio Scott Caulfield back again, the dynamic duo here. It's the last day of June, summer just flying by, Scott, just just on a heater so far and we're back together. When was the last time we podcasted? Was it May? It's it's been a while. It's the end of the Indy 500. Yeah, just bad. We've been trying for a couple weeks.

Just bad schedules. Well, you know, Scott's been off in in wine country trying different vintages to have shape, you know, crates shipped back to his neighborhood. Am I wrong about any of this so far? And unfortunately, no, this is all, they're all true statements. Yeah, we did a did, I mean, yeah, we did a trip to Sonoma. We did a trip to Napa two days. It was. It was awesome.

The Willamette Valley is asking like, what do we need to do to get Scott, representing Westfield, to come out and sample our wines? I mean, yeah, we could in. That's all. That's all we have to do. Just need to make the call. That was great. We did a day in San Francisco and flew back. We had a great time. No kids. It's one of the we don't have, unfortunately, we don't have a great grandparent reservoir or, or a bench of grandparents who can watch the kids. So getting time away from the

kids is really tough. So this was actually a June 2020 trip that had been postponed 'cause there's this thing called COVID that went around and we came back, You know, we had a great time. It was fun. It's a it's a positive thing. I'm glad you got a chance to get away, and it's lots. Of wine, lots of wine coming and we we have we have wine storage in our basement. It's just one fun story with this.

And I thought everything was all right, but like my basement isn't cold enough and like even learn that red wine should be like if you're storing it for a long time, it's even a little bit cooler. So we bought it. You need a cave really, which I'm shocked you don't own a cave in in getting there home field. You need to buy more home field shirts and get that that sponsorship up a little bit.

So we bought a wine fridge, you know, that replicates The Cave you speak of from Amazon. Never had this from Amazon before where it was 112 LB little mini fridge. They delivered a industrial power washer to my house. Same poundage. Like it's still 114 lbs. It's like I'm on the phone and it's like, whoa, like they drive away. Then it's like there really isn't a button for like, hey, you delivered the absolutely wrong thing. There's like return it.

Like I opened it. It wasn't what I wanted. Like, well, it wasn't what I wanted and that it's a power washer and like I need to store wine. And so I returned it and it's it's, it's being the process it's being anyway. And then I bought another one and then they didn't ship it and they so it's like me getting a wine fridge has been a real problem anyway. Nobody's listening for everybody's like damn. No, no, no, GAIL. Double pods please.

I am, I am constantly amazed at the amount of people who are expressed interest in you, this particular aspect of your life. So I actually think we're doing folks a favor by talking about this. This is this is quite good. The wine fridge thing is funny. I, I remember a few years ago I was, I was house shopping in Bloomington and there was a house near, so basically kind of close to campus, but off aways a nice mid century modern type of place.

It had in its basement a wine cellar that like I've never seen before, like this was a, it was almost like it was a glass enclosed room that must have had storage for 800 bottles of wine. It was like, it was insane. I was like, what on earth? Like how much wine am I going to have to buy over time to put in here? And then I actually, I know the people who bought that house and I was talking about it to them a couple of years later and they were like, yeah, we took that

out first thing. It's like what we're going to do with it. And I'm like, oh man, I, I get it. I get why you would take that out, but that's, that feels like a bit of a waste. That's a lot of of infrastructure. What do you? Pin there like a sauna like you could, you could. This was like the perfect spot. It really was. It's just, you know, the owners, what do they put in? Actually, I don't, I didn't ask them. I was so taken aback by the fact they've taken it out. I didn't.

Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, so good to talk to you folks again. And just a reminder, we are part of the Back Home network here on Crimson Cast and you can catch the other Back Home Network shows regularly, XS and Joes with a really fun set of recent episodes and sneak preview. I'll be going on XS and Joes, we think before the end of the month to talk about something that'll be of interest to most of you.

Also, of course, assembly call. They're on a bit of a summer hiatus, as have we been, but they're they're they're bringing it back here soon. You've also, I mean, there's a ton of shows new show launched by Austin render the dribble Dr. podcast as he explores big 10 women's basketball with some of the luminaries from across the conference. All of us on the big the back home network, not the big home network. The back home network brought to

you by home field apparel. Your place to go for the finest in college fashions, the softest fabrics, the coolest designs. I'm wearing, of course, my Let's shock the world fairly Dickinson sweat or just not a sweatshirt regular T-shirt today I. Mean we talked about what to turn The Cave into like you could. I could easily not only have a wine cave but like a home field apparel cave for all.

Just like maybe, just maybe a satellite like T-shirt press, like, you know, when they're, when they're extra busy and they need shipments, you know? You you will you'll store it, but you also you'll print on the side. Right, you know, kind of like those little, those little Rollo like label printers, but but for T-shirts, you know, you're just gonna cricket shirts at your house. It's like a satellite T-shirt office. I mean, they're they're selling enough T-shirts.

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To be ridiculously good anyway. So home field, apparel.com, please check them out. Also, just a reminder, we're on Sub Stack with several people. Sign up for the Sub Stack over the course of the last few days. Thanks to all of you who have joined. We've got over 950 people now following us on the free Sub Stack. You get your podcast delivered right to your inbox. You don't have to, you know, hack your way through the jungles of social media to find our stuff.

There's also a paid option if you'd like to support the podcast financially. It's $5.00 a month, $50 a year. We try to give you some extra content. I just released AVIP video last week, actually two days ago, I guess, and we may actually do another one here with this podcast. So you get that, you'll get a few other extras as we move forward. So consider doing that. But regardless, sign up for free sub stack crimsoncast.substack.com. We'd love to have you in the community.

All right, Scott, we haven't talked in a while. So there's lots of different directions that we could go with things. But let's maybe start off by talking about a couple of things related to IU sports specifically. We'll kind of meander into a few other categories. We let's talk about football 1st and you know, we've, we've haven't talked a huge amount about the roster yet. I think we're going to save that until we get a little bit closer to camp.

IU continues to recruit very well, which is exciting. We've seen the Hoosiers get, you know, they just got another wide receiver out of Florida this in the last couple of days. And so clearly something's clicking there. But there were also some changes that happened with the seating in the stadium. We really haven't had a chance to talk about this yet. The student section getting both expanded and shifted a little bit.

So now it's taking up most of the northeast and north, not quadrant, I guess, but like that, that particular wedge of the stadium. You've got the Tobias Center, there's some changes going on there. You've got rooftop at the Rock. They're they're making that like a pure event space, it sounds like, at least from what we can tell. So lots of changes going on in the stadium. We've got new vendors coming in for food, which should be, I think a good thing.

And overall interesting your overall thoughts. As you know, you and I have both been season ticket overs with football for a while. I guess where like what? What strikes you from all of this and where are you seeing it going? I'm. Going to start with the so the first thing real quick with the players that you mentioned you, you I listened to your pod yesterday, you know, and it it yeah, of course. And it had you had a very a good point that I just want to kind

of add on there for a second. You know, somebody asked the question of, you know, the the recruiting seems to be, you know, getting a little bit better, but the rankings aren't that good and trying to kind of, you know, square that circle of the rankings and all that. And, and I think that the point is it, it feels like, you know, we are not so much recruiting for rankings or, you know, player stars, but more for for

need. I think if you looked at teams like Iowa and Wisconsin, their recruiting rankings really doesn't matter. Like I don't think their fan bases get too up in arms in it because they know they're recruiting for a certain type of player and whether that player is a one star or a five star. It's like we got to get the guys that we need in Iowa's case, like we just need huge offensive lineman and we need to play defense and not really worry about offense. And so it does feel like

Cignetti's doing that. And so I I think it's all good there. And when you talk about the stadium, you know, I think that the student section move. I'm I'm actually more curious your thoughts. That's kind of an area that I think I think you're moving your seats to. I've got a couple friends who sat in that area. You know, I, it's unfortunate because you know, for those who are not season ticket holders, basketball does a reseating every single year.

So every year you get a time and you have to go online and you pick your seats and doesn't matter what, you can't say I want to save my seats from last year. It's like not an option. Everyone 100% the deck is reshuffled every single year. Football doesn't do that. And it's actually been a little bit frustrating at times. Like, you know, my wife and I had two tickets and then we had a son. We're going to bring our son to

the game. It's like, well, we can't just add a third ticket because there's somebody sitting there. So it's like, if you want a third ticket, you now have to move. And that's kind of a bummer. And then we had another child. You know, kids always mess things up. They do. In every walk of life in. Every walk of life, yes, but you know, so the fact that they haven't receded in football and don't do it every year, I think causes some of these problems.

I understand why you don't because people have areas they like to sit in and all that. But you know, I, I would say that all of this feels like a program kind of growing up like into adolescence as a program that, you know, we're going to try and have a cohesive student section where they can be there and effective and loud and more connected. I think that's important. You're going to have to move things around and make that happen.

You know, the, the Tobias Center you, you mentioned is an area that used to be, you know, certain levels of varsity club donors could win there during the game. They're changing that where the, the ACT. You still need to be at a certain level with the varsity club, but then you also need to pay, you know, 500 bucks a head to get in there for the season. They they're going to add some, you know, alcohol and food pieces to that, to that price.

It's, it's not awesome, but it's like, all right, this feels like a pro again, It's like coming out of adolescence, like this is a program that that's, that's growing and kind of there will be some growing pains, but sorry, I'm kind of all across the board. I, I think the student section, I think it's good to just have that like we're going to have a cohesive student section. We're going to have a student section identity. I hope the summer out of this

comes some you know, it's funny. It's like IU football's almost in like the the the burst stages, like it'd be cool if they came up with some chance or just, you know, things that kind of happened during the game organically versus like the shark attack sounds we make and like the first down, like there's a lot of weird mismatch of, you know, it's almost like a thrift store putting stuff together. It's like none of it really goes together.

So I think hopefully with a one student section, you get a little more cohesiveness in in the stadium. Yeah, it's a really interesting area. And I think you hit the nail on the head. It is a program that is like, I don't know if it's, I don't know if growing into adolescence is quite the right phrase yet because all of this is still preliminary in a lot of ways. Like we've tried over the course of the last 15 years to put different things in the stadium. There's been some changes.

None of them have really stuck. And a lot of it is just because there's no culture around IU football. I mean, there just isn't the closest thing. What? What's puberty like us getting our coach hired from some other program? Like what? What does puberty become for us? I, I, I shudder to think about what it might be, but you know, the, the lack of culture around IU football. I mean, what is IU football culture? When you get right down to it, I don't think it really exists.

And that's a combination of a bunch of different factors. And it's why sustaining things here is so difficult in as much, I mean, even going back to, you know, the famous period in the late 80s, early 90s where, you know, we went to the the went to bowls relatively regular, went to the All American Bowl, went to the Peach Bowl, went to the Liberty Bowl, went to the Peach

Bowl again. And, you know, IU people went to those bowl games in earnest to start with and then stopped going because it was almost like, well, we've done that. You know, the we need to get like bigger bowls. And, you know, and then the team was never quite good enough. There was never like a culture that was built in to celebrate all of those things. And then immediately afterwards, you had arguably the worst period in IU football history from about 1995 to 2000 and seven, 2006.

So you'd. Like to call it our time on campus. Yes, that that was our time, you know, that was when we were there. But that so this is where I think the fact that a lot of at least externally, a lot of the way IU has handled football has been as a placeholder to get to basketball.

And I don't necessarily even mean in terms of how the fans think about it. I mean, the athletic department, you know, so many football season ticket holders didn't go to games because all they were doing was getting extra priority points for basketball. And you know, it's funny, I mentioned on a a previous podcast, someone asked like, what what else do we need to do to try to, from lack of a better term, professionalize the football fan experience? I was like get rid of pass outs, No.

I, I and I completely agree with you. Someone wrote me afterwards, I forget who it was, I apologize, I don't have the name off the top of my head. And they were like, I was talking to somebody about that and they said they were going to stop buying football tickets if we couldn't have pass outs anymore. And that's part of the problem is that that's the attitude.

It's like, well, I want these tickets and I want to be able to go in and do whatever and then just meander out whenever it suits me. That is an attitudinal thing on the part of the fans. And I don't blame them because a, the product hasn't been, you know, great. It's been, the product's been a lot better over the last decade than most people give it credit for. Yes, the product was bad the last couple of years, but take those two years out and you know, you're talking about a

stretch. If you go back to 2013, you know, you, you had five wins, six wins, six wins, five wins, five wins, eight wins, you know, a six and two season. I mean, it was, it's been a really good vintage of IU football, relatively speaking, at least enough that you could get excited about it. And yet we constantly find ourselves kind of, you know, resetting back to 0 on a lot of this stuff. And so I do think moving the student section around, shifting some of the seats, it makes some

sense. There has to be some success on the field that can get people excited though, in order to make that feel like it actually was in service of something as opposed to simply shifting deck chairs around. You know, I, I at the end of it all, but I think that's the biggest issue is like I there have been attempts in the past to improve the overall stadium atmosphere, but as you said, it's this weird tapestry of different special interests.

You know, it's like, well, the band should be important here, you know, and, and in the XY and Z or well, gosh, the kids, what about not whole part? It's always been like everything except that, you know what's going to help make it the toughest atmosphere that you can play football in. It's always been we want our special interest accounted for. And it's not to say that those things aren't important, but they're less important than the core atmosphere of the stadium.

And the fact that people get mad about those little special interest things getting affected, rather than getting mad that the atmosphere in the stadium is bad, is kind of an indication of the larger cultural issue that IU football has to fix. Well, and it feels like, you know, athletics, they, they treat this with kind of the like kid gloves, like we can't do anything to make people mad because we don't want to lose ticket holders.

Like like you said, like, you know, like don't do pass outs. We're like, well, I wouldn't buy tickets. We didn't have pass outs and it feels like it's like, all right, well, we can't do that because we're going to lose people. Because the trouble is, you know, what should be drawing in the people, as you said, is like winning games. And the idea should be, you know, from from the like, hey, man, this is the way we're going.

They should probably reseat the stadium every single year because you look at basketball, there is no like, well, people like where they sit and there's, you know, nobody cares in basketball. It's like, hey, this is the way we're doing it. If you don't like it, by all means, there's a waiting list. We'll let somebody else in. The trouble is the football, there's not a waiting list.

And I think if you start pissing people off trying to make they're, they got to walk a fine line is by doing these changes, you're going to piss some people off. What you need is the product to be good enough to bring in more people. Because people will leave. Like, man, you know, they'll be pissed. Like I don't want the student section over there. Like I'm never buying tickets again.

If you do pass outs like I'll never come back again, you have to be OK, kind of be like, all right, that's good because we'll lose 20 people, but we're going to gain 50 because of the play. The trouble with IU football is the play hasn't always been there enough to draw people back in or to keep people there. And so it does feel like you're you're servicing a lot of these kind of special interests. And you know, go to any other major sporting event, there aren't pass outs like this is.

It's not something that's very common in other areas. Yeah, I mean, the pass out is not the same as like the Indy 500 letting you bring in, you know, a 24 pack of beer as long as you know, they're in cans. Like it's it's not it's it's not a perdition that we really need to save the and then look, ultimately you're you you're right. The product hasn't been great. We've been saying for years you don't build fan culture and then have a good team.

You have a good team and then you build fan culture and that to me is what's at stake right now. Over the course of the next five or six years, however long Signetti and this group are here, can you actually start to build that culture 'cause I think it is clear that this vintage of IU athletics is taking football seriously. They're putting money forward, They're they're putting an IL

money forward. Like all of that is happening, but it has to be something where you set some rules and I think all the rules are reasonable. Like the idea that we don't want to piss people off. I, I even think that's a little

overblown. I think it's more, well, since most of these people are buying tickets for basketball instead of football, There's like, there's a perceptional issue in terms of like, let's make this situation as easy as possible because we don't want to, like we don't want to lose potential revenue on the other side of things. That's, that's, I guess ultimately where I'm going with this. It's ultimately all of these changes. They're a little abrupt, they

happened a bit late. None of them are unreasonable and I actually don't think they went far enough with some of them. There has to be something on the field that's going to make people want to come in the stadium because, yeah, you could be upset. I don't get pass outs, but at the end of the day, if the team's winning, you're not going to want to leave anyway. If they're competitive, you're not going to want to leave anyway. That's really where you want to

get. So it's it's really the egg coming before the chicken, I think in this case. The other thing you mentioned was the, the variety of new food or some new food options, which I think that's an area where, you know, the people who are running Memorial Stadium seem to take a breath, take a deep, hard look in the mirror and really get better at this. They've added some, some new

beer carts. They do have some vendors like they have the, you know, the bends, I think the pretzels and they, they have some different things going on there, which is good. They really have to figure out a way to get better at efficiency, having all the stands open and then having everything that's needed and kind of seeing, you know, we, we, we harping back to it. So I don't want to keep hitting it, but like that Cincinnati game in 2021, I believe. Yeah, Yeah.

It was like super hot and there was just not enough water. And. And that's where you got to just kind of see an audible and be like, all right, we're going to have a couple stands just selling water. Just nothing but water. You know, I I I was there this spring for Kane Brown had a concert at Memorial Stadium. And by the way, side note, it was a kind of a really quirky and interesting concert venue. I can't remember the last time they held, you know, a major concert with like, you know,

25,000 people there. It was a cool concert venue. The only trouble was the the concessions were an absolute nightmare, you know that not everything was open. Everyone guess what, country concert, everybody wanted a beer. They had like 3 beer stands going. The lines were absurd.

You know, it's, it's and it's those kinds of things that I hope they can figure out a way to have efficiency hat maybe try and get some, you know, grab and go scan in and out kind of spots, you know, be a little bit more progressive with that, because that is an area that that desperately needs work and is, you know, somebody who wants to watch football games and has

two kids. You know, part of the reason that we've been doing the Tobias Center for the last couple years is because I'm like, I I don't care if I have to give an extra, you know, big dollar amount to the varsity club. It's better than waiting in line for a hot dog and missing an entire quarter, which has happened at times. So, you know, they need to figure those things out.

So I hope as they add more of those vendors, they're able to do that because the the two concourses on the two main sections, there's a ton of room there. So, you know, I know they can't build more physical session stands under the stadium, but you have tons of room where you could have little pop ups and and, you know, try and it that's something that hasn't changed in years. And I really hope does start to be changed because it it becomes

a very tough process. And as a fan who, you know, when you want the full crowd stadium, you want the place full and then to see it like, you know, basically all of the processes not working and everything breaking apart. It's like this. We need to be ready to handle 55,000 people a a weekend for eight weekends a year. Yeah. We'll see. It should be an interesting atmosphere with eight home games this year. So it'll be it'll be something.

So we'll look forward to talking more about that as we move forward as well as what's going on with the roster as that continues to build, not just for this upcoming year, but for next year as well. Let's switch gears to IU basketball. Of course, the big news from this past week, Khalil Ware getting drafted a bit earlier than a lot of people that are projected him going to the Miami Heat. And this is yet another IU

player that gets drafted. It it feels like to some degree, you know, in this day and age, you, you know, needing that additional boost to being able to say we're placing players in the NBA. It really does help not just in terms of regular recruiting, but in terms of portal recruiting.

And you know, you likes, you know, ideally we want to see more of that occurring moving forward in terms of like not just landing those types of players, but also the case with Khalil Ware where his draft stock was in some significant jeopardy coming here. And not only does he stabilize it, but he improves significantly on the position. And you know, you got to give Mike Woodson credit for that in

terms of his development. And this is now, you know, you you add Jalen Uchefino to that mix. Trace Jackson Davis was drafted pretty late, but clearly had a great first season as a member of the Golden State Warriors. I mean, like I, I, he's a, he's a success story because he was basically off draft boards for most of his time at IU and he got drafted. That's a big deal. Yeah. And so, you know, without, without, it's one small piece of things.

But I, I do think that with the way that things are situated now and with NIL Bunny being what it is, this is still a piece that matters to to athletes. It's like this idea that I need to go somewhere where I'm going to be put into position where I have a good chance of not just getting drafted, but getting drafted in the first round. And that's, you know, whatever criticisms or concerns we might have about other aspects of the program, this does not appear to be one that we need to worry

about. I mean, this is when you look at what IU's been able to do and I think you're going to get this again because it's a really good chance Omar Balo's going to be drafted at a pretty high number, especially when you see where Zach Edie went in the draft higher than a lot of people thought. Maybe there's some changing thought processes about that type of player at the NBA level.

Even though Ballo did most of his college career in Arizona, I use going to get the credit when and if he's drafted in the first round next year. This is a nice spot to be and it's a spot I think that's been a little touch and go over time. You know, especially in the Archie era, Romeo Langford excluded, it kind of was like, well, like even when even when you didn't have guys drafted, it didn't feel like that was going

to happen. It kind of feels like it's going to happen regularly with Woodson at this point. Yeah, you texted me this this morning. I started thinking about it. You know, to me, for a lot of ways the comp of Khalil Ware has to me always been Noah Vonle in that, you know, Vonle came in pretty highly recruited. He was drafted 9th, so got even drafted higher.

But in a season where kind of not a lot, not a lot happened from a, you know, basket the team didn't make the, you know, didn't have anything happen that year though Vonle was there. You know, with with those two years, you know, the year before you had Oladipo going 2nd and Zeller going fourth. In the draft he had second, fourth. The next year he had a 9th. You would have thought at that point too. It's like, all right, well, now

we are swimming in these waters. And then we really didn't swim in those waters again for a while. You know, where where I think things could be different is it did feel like, you know, quick thought not going to re litigate the green area. It didn't feel like at that point Crean kind of shifted his recruiting from, you know, up to

that point. It was kind of like team building and getting local players and trying to get one or two and getting lucky with a kid like Zeller being in Indiana and then trying to get a couple of you know, we'll get old depot to see if we can get it better, you know, get somebody who can get better. And it felt like Crean just went off the now I want nothing but top 25 picks and it didn't work out with what we've seen with Woodson.

It does feel like this is this is kind of been his mode of operation from the get go is I'm going after some high level, you know, recruits and kids like Jalen Hutchefino. I'll get some, I won't get others. But then every year in the portal, we're going to be playing for the the top dollar guys.

And and it feels like this is more replicatable where other times when coaches have had success at IU, it feels like they're recruiting strategy that immediately changes to something that they pivot to something else. It doesn't feel like it feels like this is what Woodson's going to do. And I agree, if this is all good, like in the end, NIL is awesome. But if you can make you can show players a path to the NBA, there's way more money there than NIL.

You know, the asterisk and the caveat I think a lot of fans feel is like this is all great, but like you, you then have to now turn turn this into success on the court. Yeah, here's a little trivia for you, Scott. OK, Since 1994, Since that, Since the end of the 94 draft, How many first round draft picks does Purdue have? That's a great question. Including Zach Edie. Yeah, yeah. Well, 94 was Glenn Robinson. So you're you're you're excluding.

Host Glenn Robinson. So, so starting with the 95 draft, which seems like a very, very poignant start date, I'm going to say one. Is it one? It's more than that. So they had. So Purdue has four in that time period. They have, they have Zach Edie, obviously. Two years ago they had Jayden Ivey. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Caleb Swan again, yeah. And then Juwan Johnson and Swan again. Juwan Johnson were kind of back

of the first round. Do you want to guess how many first round draft picks Indiana has during that same time period? 1995 The Press, You. Just came five, so I mean there's probably 8. It's more than that, believe it or not. So here's the first round draft picks Indiana has since the 95 draft. Allen Henderson, Brian Evans, Jason Collier, Kirk Haston, Jared Jeffries.

We're already up to five. DJ White, Eric Gordon, Jordan Crawford kind of cheating there, but we're going to we're going to throw him into the mix as he didn't play at Indiana. Cody Zeller, Victor Oladipo, Noah Vonle, OG Anna Nobi, Romeo Langford, Jalen Uchefino, Khalil Ware.

Even if you take out the Jordan Crawford pick, that's fourteen first round draft picks for Indiana in that time period, which is fascinating because it kind of feels like when I think about the reputation of Indiana, it doesn't feel like a place that's pumped out that many first round draft picks in the in that span of time. And granted, if you compare it to Kentucky or Duke, it's significantly less, but it's wild that there's that much of a disparity in that time period.

It's also a little sad that Indiana's had that many first round draft picks and there hasn't been more on court success across multiple coaches during that time period. But I, I was well on draft night, I was kind of poking around looking at that. I was like, damn, that's that's a lot of people over the course of you.

Know, I guess which 30 years now, but still, yeah, no, it's it's it's it's a fairpoint and I think I think it goes to show that this is a a word you use a lot like this is an alchemy like it's it's not just getting good players. You have to get good players with, you know, the right team around them and, you know, getting the the supporting players as well. And it, it does feel like Indiana in that time, you know, has either gone way too hard one

way or the other. It's like we're just, we're either not swimming in those waters. We're going to get a bunch of two stars, see what we can do, or we're going to get a couple of, you know, five star stud recruits and then put, you know, a bunch of one stars around it. Or just we're not going to put together the plan of who else we're going to get that. Yeah, that's that's I mean, and

the Purdue thing is real. Like that's just, you know, they have a system and their system really doesn't need and or feature high level players like that. Yeah, it's and the whole thing's interesting to me and, and even if you take, you know, second round draft picks, I mean, Indiana's pretty much, you know, pretty consistent in that on that front as well. So I don't know, just some

interesting things. It's the middle of summer, you know, we're we're just looking for stuff to talk about at this point, but but anyway, the. Thing is that the draft still matters, and I think as everything was changing in college basketball, you know, money's still a big piece.

You know, NIO probably in some places means more to the players on, you know, programs that are not, you know, don't have a real perfect like, you know, lacrosse or swimming or areas where there's not a real, you know, professional piece for if you're a top level, you know, Khalil Ware type who thinks you can get to the NBANIL is kind of nice to have along the way.

But now what Khalil Ware is going to earn in the NBA, and if he can stay in the NBA for a second contract is going to far, far exceed anything he'd ever get in NIL. Yeah. Well, the other reason that I think it's important is I mean, if you look at the start of the draft, the, the, the early rounds of the, or the early picks in this draft, a lot of people from France, a lot of

people from overseas. And it really does feel like there, there should be some warning bells going off in terms of the way American basketball and especially college basketball is thinking about this. Because it felt like, you know, the big winners of the first half of the draft were France and the G League and college basketball, so much gets caught up in this idea of college basketball. You know, is, is you know, about school as much as about basketball.

Meanwhile, we find more and more that being a professional basketball player, you're probably going to go to the G League, you're probably going to go to, to your, or, you know, if you're, if you're European, you may stay in Europe, stay in your Academy system 'cause you have a better shot at going to the pros that way. You know, the, it's almost like, I think college basketball, if you think about it as a media

entity needs stars. And if you think about the stardom that college basketball players are able to acquire and, and maintain and also the money now that they're able to make, that almost becomes like a, you know, that becomes your professional career to some degree. It keeps the sport alive. And it also can put you in a position where people think you should be drafted perhaps higher than you actually should be drafted. A lot of people got upset that like Dalton Connect didn't get

drafted earlier. And you know, GM said, well, it's the age thing. Like he's just, he's too old. Why would you draft a 24 year old or 23 year old when you could draft an 18 or 19 year old? Because you're drafting on potential. You're drafting on the fact that you want to get that player in their prime. If he turns into a a star, you want to be able to sign that player or have the rights to sign that player at a higher level than the other teams in

the league. This is how the the collective bargaining agreement works. So I look at it from college basketball. If college basketball had anybody in charge, if there was anybody running it that was thinking holistically, anybody at all, they would be like, look, there are a lot of basketball players that people like watching that are connected to brands that people like

watching in college basketball. Why don't we steer into that more because, you know, are we going to have the same ratings as the NBA? Not necessarily. But look, Caitlin Clark's a great example of this. If you look at the ratings that Caitlin Clark games had, not just regular season, but tournament games. You know, the, the, the national title game two years in a row, like outstripped the men's national title game, like outstripped a lot of other of other games.

Well, that's not just, I mean, Caitlin Clark was kind of a phenomenon, but the idea that star power at the college level matters and in relation to the draft, it it's it's something where you can, if you've got better rules, I think you can be a place where you can cultivate top level talent. They can get paid at a higher level than they do at the G

League level or overseas. But this is where the NCAA keeps handcuffing itself to a terrible model because the, you know, all the restrictions on practice and development, all the restrictions on when you can meet with coaches and get coached. It it's like it makes it a less serious option for player development, which is why a lot of these college players don't get drafted as high.

It's why scouts go out of their way to say, here's what this guy can't do, whereas they focus on what the people overseas can do. So this go ahead. I was. Just saying just, you know, 2 two things. You know, one, you talk about, you know, the the interest of the American players, you know, listening to any of the draft, you know, previews, which I did, you know, it's all talk about, you know, Donovan Kling And I think where Edie was going to go

was a big part of this draft. Obviously Ronnie James is kind of a, you know, unique story that got a lot of interest. But, you know, people were talking about Klingon and, you know, Reed Shepherd and then you mentioned, you know, Dalton connect like, and then he'd be like, Oh yeah, and the French guys anyway, you know, but do you think Steven Castle could

run? I mean, like even all of the draft infrastructure we have here is focused on the people that they know and they've seen just because they've seen them play and they've seen, you know, Klingon do it in games. And there's, you know, breakdowns of his game against Illinois as you've seen it. The other thing I'm stealing this from Bill Simmons podcast. If you've heard it, I apologize. And I I did not Fact Check this, but I was listening to it.

I got it right in my head. But here's a trivia question for you. With all the French players going first. Reed Shepherd was the 3rd pick out of Kentucky. And Simmons is like, this is the first American born white guy in a long time to go this high in the draft. Do you know that the last highest drafted white American player to go to go higher that to be the first pick, the 1st pick that's not, you know, first American player is. White. I understand what you mean. The Christian Laettner.

I don't know. No IU ties. IU ties. I'm no who was it? Kent Benson. Oh, wow. Yeah, Jeez, that's that is 76, Yeah. Or 77, number one. Yeah. Well, that is pretty, pretty. Well, the whole Reed Shepherd thing is fascinating. It's a kind of a good example of

what I'm talking about here. And as much as, you know, for the longest, I remember reading, I think, I think that was the recruitment they were talking about where like Calipari was uncertain if this was a guy they wanted to draft or wanted to drive. Well, I mean, it's Kentucky.

So he might definitely say that if they wanted to recruit, it was it was out of character to the types of players that Calipari was bringing in. But it look, I, I think a, a lot of the attitudes towards basketball talent in the United States have been kind of calcified over the course of the last 30 years in or 40 years really in terms of like who's good, who's not good, where you're going to get serious

talent. Meanwhile, the rest of the world, at least the parts that care about basketball, really feel like they've decided they're going to throw all that out and they're completely changing their approach to how they develop players. This is something that I talk about quite a bit. This, you know, the, as much as gets complained about the pay for play system in the United States and it is bad at the, at the youth level.

There's also such little organization and such little structure in the way that players get developed. And you get a lot of basketball people who get kind of crotchety when you talk about this stuff. But it's hard to, you know, when you look at soccer development in Europe and the, the coaching badges that you have to earn in order to be rated to coach youth and be employed by youth academies. And you look at the United States system and it is, it is a

free for all. You know, sometimes you get really good people in there who know what they're talking about. Sometimes you get people with some questionable intent. Sometimes you get people who just want to be around the game but aren't very good at coaching. And, and there's such a focus on a, taking money out of the pockets of the, of whoever's paying for, whether it's the parents or whoever. And B games, travel, you know,

playing against other teams. And it's not just there's no practice in. This travel stuff, it's just. For games and it's and it's not just basketball, it it's baseball. It's like it's just this, it's this endemic thing throughout most of American sport. And, and again, there are exceptions and there are, you know, there are smaller academies that develop players very well. But if you look at it as a

whole, it's very uneven. And you know, American basketball has lasted like it's it's survived up to this point internationally because of how much athleticism exists within

the American game. And the fact that when you've got 300 and some million people and you've got a certain quotient of people that have that level of athleticism, you're just by natural, you know, by by the force of of numbers, you're going to get some people that come through the fire on the other side and you get a LeBron James or you get an Anthony Edwards. You know that that.

That will always be an advantage that America has because it's the largest country by far population wise of the countries that care about basketball. But when you look at how, how far above their, their weight that like a Slovenia or a Croatia or a Serbia punches or even France, which I mean, who thinks of France when they think of like great centers of basketball? And yet you look at the players that France has developed and generated over the course of

time. And it's like, wow, that what what you hope to see and what I'd love college to do is rather than take the approach they've taken over the course of time, which is basically, we are going to set the bar from a player development perspective at the lowest common denominator, like the Division Three school. Because we're going to have these basically be the same rules that we use at upper levels. Not completely, but you know

what I mean? Even the lowest Division One team, it's like, well, you don't have the resources to do that. Fine. You're the standard. Everybody else has to adhere to that, which is how you end up with limited days that you can be in contact with coaches, limited official time to practice during the week. Again, you look at it from an academic perspective, and I say this as an academic. This has always been to me, the real problem with trying to balance academics and athletics.

These are top level athletes. These are elite athletes. These are people who in any other country should be training and practicing essentially as their job from the time they're eighteen, maybe even slightly before that. Not being forced to take a 15 hour credit load while also practicing, you know, 4 hours a day and also being in the weight room for three hours a day. Like it's it's not a serious way

to go about sport training. And since there is no other sizable way to train basketball, you can do this in football to some degree because there's nobody competing with this in in the rest of the world on football. But in basketball where there is, in soccer where there is, this is a really stupid way to go about handling players that are between the ages of 18 and 22. Agreed. I also think, again, this is where someone was in charge, they would see this.

You know, obviously college basketball has a very close relationship with the NBA, but you know, the NBA is trying to do this with the G League and G League Ignite. They've had some success. You know, Scoot Henderson got highly drafted. I'm not sure he looked ready, but that maybe is him. Not the the but you know, you're seeing both the Thompson brothers went through kind of a a training program like that. Like if if there was someone in charge of college basketball, I agree with you.

You get rid of some of these limits. And honestly, this is a much better path. It's like, hey, you could go to G League unite and you could do nothing but basketball with train people. But like you're immediately playing with adults who are professionals who really don't care. You know, the other teams you're playing don't care about your

development. These are dudes just trying to get a paycheck out of your mouth, which I understand in college basketball you're still going for, but at least you you're going against people who are in the same phylum of, you know, 18 to 23 and you know, they're all trying to get the

same thing. But there is something different about like the professional 32 year old basketball player in the G league who is trying to get back up, like he does not care about an 18 year old kids projection or, you know, injury, things like that. They they play with different kinds of tricks. And so I but again, there's no one in college basketball monitoring or doing this.

But like this is what I think is interesting is if, you know, if the NBA was able to figure this out, it does feel like they'd be totally cool getting their own development system and just cutting the top level talent out of college basketball and just putting it into the G League. But that, you know, they've been trying that for 20 years and that's not happening either. So it's like it's it kind of continues to fall on college

basketball. But there I'm with you, having all of these arcane rules, especially now with everything changing, doesn't make any sense. And it is interesting that G League Ignite is gone and, you know, specifically NIL and the changing college basketball landscape because they're like before it was like, well, you had the choice of either I'm going to go to G League Ignite and not very make very much money, relatively speaking, but it'll raise my draft stock. Except it wasn't raising the

draft stock of those people. And now they're missing out on NIL opportunities. So now essentially you've got like you've got overtime elite, right? And that's about it. But that doesn't mean that the college system is better in terms of development. It just means that you can get paid money at the college level. And this is where ultimately, as much as we hear people talking about why don't we just split football off and make it its own

thing. And at the college level, to me, it's like we need to start taking the development of our basketball players more seriously because, you know, we've already seen the US lose, you know, gold medal rounds in in the international tournaments.

And it's hit or miss now. But like the rest of the field is caught up. Same thing happening in women's soccer, by the way, like the advantage that the US women's national team had from title 9:00 and from the 25 year jump start that they got on the rest of the world in terms of taking female athletics seriously, at least in soccer, that's gone.

Like you look across the, you know, it's, it's the, you know, Germany and France and England and Spain and China and Brazil, like the, the European countries in particular, they have professional women's leagues and soccer, they've really caught up. They're taking it a lot more seriously now, I would argue than the US is where if you're a female soccer player, you don't have a lot of options other than college, which is incredibly restrictive or going overseas,

which kind of defeats the purpose, you know? So these are the kinds of things to think about and they get lost in the the headlines regarding like NIL and the changing college sports landscape. But they're things that we need to think about 'cause there's great coaches, like great basketball minds at the college level. When people ask why would you leave that to go to the NBA? You know, people were asking that about Dan Hurley.

Why would he leave UConn? I mean, he'll get paid plenty of money, but you are limited in the amount of coaching you can actually do at this level you are in. And college coaches have to be logistics experts and they have to manage personalities among parents and donors, and they have to go out and fundraise like they're doing that. It feels like more than they're doing actual coaching and

instruction. You don't get a whole lot of time to do that, relatively speaking, at the college level, regardless of the sport that you're in. These are the kinds of things that I think for the US as a country to take sport as seriously as it does and yet allow this kind of Mickey Mouse. Set of rules to be in place as far as the most important years arguably of a player's development doesn't make a whole lot of sense.

Well, it's also funny that we are one of the few countries that just immediately specializes kids when they're 7-8 years old and that doesn't seem to be working either like it does, you know, all these areas. Doesn't seem like we are owning any of these sports that we're having kids specialize in. And the kids who just kind of, you know, play a lot of sports until they're 12 and then suddenly figure out what they want to do and get into it. Yeah, that seems to be the way to go.

But yet we're not, we're not doing that real quick. You just mentioned the Dan Hurley thing. I, I thought it was funny. I mean, obviously the Lakers didn't offer enough money to make that really a real decision, which is a whole different discussion of podcast. But I did think some of the discussion, you know, people were like, man, why would he leave UConn? He's got it made there in the shade. And my thing was like, dude, he could leave UConn, go to the Lakers. He could do awful.

He could lose 70 games in a row. The minute he is fired from the Lakers. He would have his pick of any job he wanted in college, probably the UConn job again. So there is definitely an inertia of once you get going, it's easy to get going. And you once Schefsky built Duke, it's like you kind of it's just a battleship that's moving the right direction. So he would have to restart that somewhere else. But this idea of like, man, I don't know, man, you have a great job in college basketball.

It's like, dude, he would have the pick of any job like he wanted, no matter irregardless of what happened at the Lakers. Anyway, I just thought that was that. That was funny. No, it is. And ultimately I, I mean Hurley could have done whatever he wanted. I mean, Hurley could have probably run for governor of Connecticut if he wanted to and and gotten that job easily. So but no, you're right.

I mean, the, the idea of you could leave and I think ultimately it's like if you, you never know if this, the thing that you've developed is going to be the same if you go somewhere else. I actually think This is why Bob Knight didn't leave IU. The couple of times that he thought about leaving IU, it's like, well, I've already got this built. And as we saw, even though he was, it was later in his life, like it's hard to go somewhere

else and build something. There's no guarantee it's going to happen again. But I don't know, it's from from the perspective of, yeah, he'll, that dude will always have the opportunity to coach at the college level if he wants it. He could have gone somewhere else. And maybe that says something about the Lakers as. An NBA guy also, I think it has way more to do with the Lakers that, you know, and I thought it was funny that they, you know, everyone's like, Oh my God, you know, it's such an

embarrassment. It's like, well, you know, Schefsky turned down the Lakers like people can turn down the Lakers like they'll do OK. I think that's more like I think that's a mess of a team with a bad salary cap. It's like you have a 41 year old LeBron who at some point is going to start declining, you would think, but like he's seems petulant and he, you're kind. It's Lebron's team. Even if you're Dan Hurley, it's still Lebron's team. I'm not sure that's the best job.

And as, as you've seen in the NBA, the the job matters so much more than the coach. And there's very few coaches who I would say it really doesn't matter that, you know, the, the, the Warriors were there. It's like Steve Kerr steps into, I think Steve Kerr is a great coach, but it's also he had a great opportunity that he stepped right into. Anyway, we're off top. No, it's good.

Anyway, last thing we wanted to hit obviously in the NIL space and kind of the changing financial landscape of things in college sports. We keep coming back to this because there's always something new to talk about with all of this. But you know, I mean, Scott, the it's, it's an interesting different type of landscape now. And I touched on this a little bit in the last podcast about where is the money coming from really? You know, how does all this get paid for?

And the idea that now that, you know, college athletic departments are allowed to directly pay NIL rather than having to rely solely on donors. This does not mean that donor money is going away. And I think that to some degree, a lot of it is like donor money is always going to play a huge role in college sports because it's it's kind of like it's the same reason why the NFL doesn't develop its own minor league to

develop players. Why do something with my money when you're going to do it with your money on my behalf? And so that's kind of how I look at things. You know, in terms of the way that we think about donations, people are, I think they underestimate the amount of money that athletic departments getting donations on a yearly basis or on an endowed basis when everything from scholarships to, you know, facilities.

But now we're in this interesting thing where you're going to have to write checks every year to a large number of athletes. And if the money coming in off the television revenue has to go to the people that are earning it, which is generally football players primarily, and then basketball a little bit less so. And then not a whole lot beyond

that. What do you do with that ratio in that paradigm where it's like you've got your huge donors who are going to probably be the ones that come in and write the check to get like a top recruit because that's going to take something with six or seven figures. But that's you can't just sustain off of those big donations. You have to figure a way to

cultivate other things as well. So I will not get political, but I, I, I do see a real parallel, parallel between politics and, you know, the issues with politics and the issues with what college athletics is going to face here soon, which I'm sure everybody loves because politics super fun right now. Everyone's happy with everything but not taking sides. This is both Democrat and Republican side.

You know, both of those deal with an issue with the exact same issue where in politics you have, you know, a few number of very high net worth donors who give a lot of money and they want their candidates to push the agendas that they have set forth. And so you have to court those high dollar people. But there's also a grassroots, you also need a, a lot of small people giving 5 or $10 a month

to kind of keep that base going. Because, you know, the people who have the 2-3 in politics, sometimes a billion dollars of checks, they're petulant and they sometimes want to do different things. Sometimes they'll leave. And you need, you can't just be courting three people. You have to court a lot. But it's, it's a tough balance. And you look at, you know, where IU is. I think that, you know, any college, it's not just IUI use

the one that I know. You know, I thought for a couple years now, it's like the Varsity Club is in an interesting spot because, you know, they need me to continue to be a Varsity Club member because the IU Varsity Club needs money to keep things going, but they also need people to donate to NIL. And so you said this in the last pod that, you know, I think it was like Wisconsin or somebody like looking to like merge those two where basically you give it to IU and they dish it out.

That probably makes the most sense because it's tough for IU. You know, it's tough for Dolson to tell not he wouldn't tell me personally. Like have varsity club. Hey, Scott, we need you to continue at the varsity club level at this level. Oh, by the way, Tobias Center is going to cost 500A head. And oh, by the way, we'd love

for you. It's not an and or it's A and give to the NIL collective, you know, because the Varsity Club has the ability to provide things to me, you know, they can give me points that they can add up. They can give me tickets. You know, this is where I find NIL interesting is they they really don't have anything to give. Like these collectives are interesting. I've looked at some of them, you know, on kind of the quid pro quo because I can just give money. I mean, you can just, I can

write a check for $10,000. Like, all right, I feel like I'm helping IU. But you know, at some point people are going to want something back, whether it's a commemorative coin or just you want something back. Like I want a meet and greet with the players or I just want something like, because I'm just tired of pumping money and getting nothing in return because then then it's just like all I want at that point is just straight wins and losses. I'm not sure how NI LS are going to do that.

But I, I do think this push and pull between big dollar and small dollar is going to be interesting because I think you see some of this now with what might be happening with the fan base in Woodson is it does feel like at the end of last year, things were a little dicey with the fan base. And I would say that was probably most of the five or $10 donation type. People seemed a little bit nervous about what was going on and it did seem like Woodson got

and this is all just rumor. The way that I interpret it did seem like a couple of the high dollar people came in and was like, no, this is not the way it's going to go where you know Woodson is going to be good. And they they spent a lot of money this offseason on a lot of players, which is great. And I hope you know, gets to a lot of wins.

But it does feel like right now we're at a point where you have a couple high dollar people who are like, Nope, this is the way that the staff is going to be and we're going to pump money into it. Some of the low dollar people are a little bit concerned. And if you have a season or two where results don't continue to go well, like how is that that push and pull going to play out anyway?

I just, I find it, I don't know that's a a long way to not even answer a question or provide another question for you. It's it's interesting. I mean, this is where I, the traditional model that IU has used, and I'm sure it's the same in most other schools, but your donations are tied to your priority points, which are tied to where you get seats in Assembly Hall. And you know, that's always been the great equalizer in terms of, well, yeah, that's fine.

You can complain about XY or Z, but you, you know, what are you going to do, pull your money out? Well, then you lose. Not only do you lose the priority points you'd be earning, but if you're like going to try to protest for a year, you lose everything years worth of points. You know, So it, it is, it is very much like one of those situations. It's like a student loan where you know, you might be paying, you might think you're paying it off, but all you're paying is a

percentage of the interest. And you know, after a while you're like, wait, I've been paying this $50,000 student loan for 10 years and now it's $150,000. What's going on? It's really hard to dig out of it. And look, ultimately, even the high level donors aren't going to suddenly walk away because they know that people are going to step in and and be willing to

replace them is necessary. And this is so I'm less interested with basketball because to some degree people can complain loudly about what they don't like about basketball, regardless of what coach it is. And sometimes things will change and sometimes things won't. Very rarely will it be, well, we're not going to donate unless you do XY or Z because it's just not a reasonable threat.

But with other sports, it is an interesting thing to think about in as much as here you have a lot of these the the more niche sports or the non revenue generating sports. So let's take football and basketball, or at least men's basketball, take them out of the equation. And this is kind of what I was trying to get out on the previous podcast. You have to be able to cultivate small motivated groups of people who tend to want to donate

specifically for sports. Because a lot of the, you know, when people think I'm going to donate, they're going to donate to like the general scholarship fund for the athletic department or whatever. They may not have thought up to this point, I'm going to donate to volleyball or I'm going to

donate to men's soccer. But that's almost what you're going to have to do. And it, and to go back to what you said, not only do you need that kind of an approach, but you also need to have something that you're getting. If you're a donor, you need to be able to have an event where you can go meet the players and interact with them.

Or you need to have something where you can interact with the coaching staff or you're, you know, there's an event out at a restaurant and it's like a fun kind of thing. And this is, you know, it's really where you have to use the marketing ability and the marketing power of the players and the coaches that you've got. It has to be dynamic. It can't just be we need money. Give us money because that, as we know in every aspect of business, doesn't get you very

far. You might have an affinity for a brand or a team. That does not mean you're going to take money out of your bank account and give it to that team. You know, there's got to be something else. And this is where for, you know, I've heard so much now, originally the idea was, or the, the thought was that colleges and universities are just going to cut sports left and right to try to get, you know, their numbers down so that they could afford all the NIL money.

A lot of them said, we really don't want to do that. And I think there's, there's a lot of arguments why you shouldn't do that. But that really is going to mean that a lot of these programs are going to essentially be forced to eat what they kill in order to keep their programs going. And I there's so little infrastructure set up around these these programs, not just at IU, but everywhere to be able

to do that. It's going to be really fascinating to see, you know, like something like a Hoosiers Connect or an official NIL collective somewhere else. I mean, they got their hands full trying to raise enough money to pay for the what they've already got in their stable, let alone adding a bunch of other stuff.

So I'm really curious to see how athletic departments manage that because most of the fundraising for athletic departments has been in a very traditional manner and you're talking about very non traditional manners of fundraising in this new reality. I completely agree, you know, but it also means this is like this is changing landscape. But you know, what's weird about

this isn't a business. You know, one of my favorite business stories when people talk about this stuff, at least in the, you know, capitalistic world is there used to be a huge industry in in the North and the north Midwest of people cutting ice and shipping ice around the country. And, you know, thousands of people worked in the ice industry. Refrigerators came out and that changed. Now those people got different

jobs. They got and, you know, but the company that made ice went out of business because that was no longer a business that was sustainable. What's weird here is. For those people who think Scott's over over exaggerating this, there's an estimated 90,000 people that worked in the ICE trade. Thank you. So there you go. Just wanted to it was a sizable number of people, OK, major in history, just in the United States.

And that was, there was a, it was an industry that capitalized at a, a moderate amount of money, around $700 million a year. So not an insignificant amount of money. Sorry, go ahead. U.S. history degree here from the great University of Indiana University. They did the University of Indiana University. It was a speech degree, wasn't a speech degree. I wish I would have taken your class now. No, but you know what's what's weird about and you can do the same thing with like, you know,

horse and buggy. There was an entire industry around caring for horses to to get you around the Model T change all of that and automobiles change that industry. Strange is not a lesson here on capitalism. What is interesting here is normally in that there in in that seismic shift moment, businesses go out of business. New businesses come up that, you know, you, you can change the workforce. All these changes need to happen.

But it's like the businesses, if you think of the colleges as the businesses, none of them are going out of business. Like, you know, IU, Purdue, Penn State, Michigan, you know, Alabama, name your school, They're all going to stay here and their varsity clubs are going to stay here. But they've got to work through the seismic shift. Like in a normal system, what you probably have is some schools would Slough off. The ones that figure it out

would come and get better. That's not what's going to happen here because the top two conferences are going to prop up all of their schools with TV money. So it's going to be interesting to see how schools do this. But I look at this, this is a complete shift in how they've

done things. You know, I was even talking to somebody last week about IU football and they're like, you know, we're talking about how they got to develop and they're like, oh, but you know, the facilities, like they really got

to work on facilities. And like, I again, I'm, I'm just a dude from the outside, but it's like, I think the, the days of spending millions on facilities is done because that was an era when you had to spend all the money you had coming in and you had nothing to spend it on.

So we build these big teams, we build facilities and now it's like, all right, well, the payers want money, but the players want money and they care probably less about a hot tub and more about like, well, give me 220 grand and I'll buy my own hot tub. I, I, I think this is all going to change and it's going to be interesting to see who, who can figure it out and who can't. But no, I'm, I'm with you.

You know, it's almost like the varsity club needs to be more hyper specific where, you know, I want to give to volleyball and football and basketball and I want money to go to those schools. But the like the push and pulls, the varsity club still needs general fund money as well. Like everybody has needs. They all need it and it all comes down to they need a lot of money from outside sources.

And you know, as you've mentioned on many of these different pods, all of these athletic departments, you're going to have to get used to, you know, not spending all of their money every single year. You know, you're going to have to either save some or reallocate or unfortunately, the huge Staffs that you've built up over the last 30 years because you weren't paying your players, you might have to downsize those Staffs. And like, it sucks.

And, you know, people will re re engineer other areas, but like the reason they have these huge Staffs and facilities because they weren't paying players. And yeah. It's like, I mean, the last thing I'll say on this, this is where I mean facilities. I agree and we've talked about it on the show before. Probably not you just I mean, you might you'll, you'll still get some new facilities built

out of a necessity, right? But you're not getting a new field hockey facility built anytime soon with university funds like those monies will just have to go elsewhere probably just for towards travel for field hockey if you're going to continue to do that. And I'm not trying to pick on field like it's the first one that came to mind. But the other area that I think is really going to take a step

back is compliance. All of these colleges and universities that hired all of these compliance people. And it's like, what are we complying with exactly at this point? A rule book where 90% of it really doesn't apply anymore. Like this is argument where there's just a, you know, dust, dust flowing by like no one's there. Yeah. The compliance office becomes like the Maytag repair person of of the college sports landscape, except there's ten of them in every athletic department anyway.

All right, we're going to go ahead and wrap up. We'll be back soon. I hope everybody has a safe 4th of July. Just a reminder folks, leave the fireworks to the professionals and just we don't want any Crimson cast members like coming back from the 4th of July break without the same. Number of fingers, you start with 10 digits, you end with 10 digits. I mean, this is this is old guy talk.

It's like you like I did my dumb stuff in my 20s and and teens with fireworks, No. I mean, do what you want, but just be careful. Yeah. Yeah, be careful. Just that's all. We're just these are, are real. Like just be. I'm not your dad. I'm just saying be careful. That's that's all I'm saying. Yeah. Anyway, All right. Well, as always, a pleasure, Scott. Great to talk to you again and great to talk with you folks as well. We'll be back soon with more Crimson CAST.

If you've got comments or questions, you can always hit us up on the Back home Network Discord or on Twitter at Crimson Cast for Scott, I'm Galen. This has been Crimson cast. We'll catch you folks. On the flip side, bring back the bison. That's all, everybody.

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