You said “other ‘moves’ will have to happen”. So, what do you believe those moves are? And what is needed to make those move possible? If your answer is $$, specify how those $$ can realistically be acquired? Or, are you saying it is already too late because of “inaction while resting on laurels”, and in that case what should we do, in your opinion? You did state that you consider Pioneer League to be not the answer, not even considering it. You said whiners” are people who don’t do anything at all about being losers. Perhaps you are just saying we are winners sometimes and losers sometimes and everyone should just live with what is, considering ourselves always to be winners regardless. OK, I can understand that point of view, and maybe I will adopt that point of view myself.sluggo wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2019 2:43 pm100% accurate you are.Yadkin wrote: ↑Tue Dec 24, 2019 11:00 amInteresting how perspectives and dynamics change over time. Thirty years ago we played basketball downtown in a 6,000-seat facility that averaged 40-45 percent occupancy when the Paladins stepped on the court (late 80s attendance averages). We build Timmons with 5,500 seats and over time slash the basketball capacity to 2,500 that, in the few times it’s been filled, sends some folks into bare-chest thumping mode. Now apply that same perspective to football. Thirty years ago we averaged 11,000-12,000 per game in a 16,000-seat stadium. If we slashed capacity to 7,500 (rough equivalent of GMA to Timmons capacity cut), how would that look with our 6,500-7,000 crowds? Bottom line is PS and its 12,900 capacity (expanded to 16,000 seats) was built for a different time, which is gone, just as was the GMA era. There is a reason Elon, with twice as many students, has a football stadium capacity of approximately 10,000. Richmond with a bigger student body has a 9,000-seat stadium. Samford with twice as many students as FU plays in a 5,500 seat stadium. Expectations for football need to recalibrated to the times.
And to the resident Pioneer League advocate...that is not the answer.
But (and you knew there would be one. lol)
Football, just like everything else in the world, is simply in the midst of "survival of the fittest".
There will be winners and losers.
Declaring football in the decline because we've had low numbers is wrongfully placing us at the center of the universe.
The reality is that we fell off the edge because of inaction in promotion and investment.
We "rested on our laurels" when we had a "captured audience" whose alternate choices for entertainment
was limited to 3 TV stations that featured fishing, bowling for dollars, bingo and gospel music bands on the
weekend.
Soon came cable TV, video games, home computers and smartphones.
And those things proved to be more "fit" than rundown stadiums with seats smaller than the average person's butt.
Winning more games will not change these things.
Other "moves" will have to happen.
In college football there will simply be 3 things :
1. winners
2. losers
3. Whiners (people who don't do a damn thing about being losers)
Here are the FCS and D2 winners
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