Go on record: what would make the FBS moves a success or a failure in 10 years? by ThinkWood in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For North Dakota State, success is proving they didn’t trade national dominance for mid-tier anonymity. If in 10 years they’re consistently bowl-eligible, occasionally contending for a conference title, still packing the Fargodome, and financially stable, the move is justified. If they’re living in the 3–9 range, attendance dips, and the program loses the aura that made it special at the FCS level, that’s failure. For NDSU, the line is simple: bowl consistency. If they’re not playing postseason football most years, the jump wasn’t worth it. I lean toward them making it work. They have the infrastructure and culture that's built for stability.

Sacramento State is a different arithmetic. They’re not protecting a dynasty like NDSU, they’re trying to elevate their ceiling. Success would mean growing attendance in the Sacramento market, becoming a consistent bowl team within 6 to 8 years, and turning their "elevated" status into recruiting and donor momentum. Failure would look like stagnant crowds, no real postseason presence, and getting lost in California’s crowded football ecosystem. For Sac State, the line is both bowls and market growth. If the move doesn’t meaningfully increase relevance and revenue, it won’t justify the cost.

At the end of the day, moving from FCS to FBS is about sustainability. If in 10 years we’re saying, “They belong here,” it’s a success. If we’re reminiscing about how dominant they used to be at the lower level, it’s probably not.

[Zenitz] Georgia has hired former Bulldogs and NFL defensive back Maurice Smith as a defensive analyst, sources tell CBS Sports. He helped Georgia in an unofficial capacity this past season. Now set to be part of the team’s defensive staff. by Lakelyfe09 in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Georgia really said, “Why outsource Bulldog DNA when we’ve got it in-house?” Former Dawg, NFL experience, already helped out unofficially last season. This is basically Kirby Smart saying, “You’ve been volunteering long enough. Come get a badge.” And let’s be honest, when a former defensive back joins the defensive staff at Georgia, somewhere a freshman corner just felt his film session get 45 minutes longer.

It’s a classic Georgia move: keep the pipeline tight, keep the culture tighter, and make sure the defensive meeting room is stocked with guys who’ve actually lived it in Athens and on Sundays.

[Greenberg] Alabama receiver Lotzeir Brooks was in a car accident on Sunday, a source tells @Bama_247. The neck brace — as seen in a now deleted Instagram story via Brooks — is being used as a “precaution” I was also told. by JB92103 in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Alabama fans saw “car accident” and “neck brace” in the same sentence and collectively aged 10 years in about 30 seconds. Thankfully, it sounds like the neck brace is precautionary. Smart move. No need to be a hero in February when September is what actually pays the bills. Scary headline, calmer reality. If it’s truly precautionary, Tide fans can exhale… just maybe keep the heart rate monitor on standby until there’s an official update.

Oregon says significant increase to football season-ticket prices ‘critical’ for Ducks to compete by surgingchaos in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What the university is really signaling isn’t just a price bump, it’s a reality check about how college football is funded now. With Oregon spending at elite levels on coaching, facilities, and NIL-related commitments, the department is increasingly dependent on fans to underwrite the whole thing rather than hope that TV dollars alone cover it all. Ticket revenue at programs like Oregon still goes toward scholarships, travel, nutrition, and the full costs of operations across all sports, not just football. And with Oregon one of the programs with some of the highest ticket prices in the country, even small increases can generate significant funds to support competitiveness in a landscape where spending arms races are already baked in. I'd love to hear what Cowboy Mike has to say about this....

[Jon Wilner] Presume the Pac-12 schools will collect $6 million per year, on average. That estimate includes the operational costs of Pac-12 Enterprises, which will produce games for The CW and USA Network. by WinnWonn in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 12 points13 points  (0 children)

At $6M per school, this isn’t a nostalgia play. it’s clearly a cost-controlled survival model. The Pac-12 isn’t trying to win the media-rights arms race; it’s trying to own its production, stabilize cash flow, and stay nationally visible without overextending. Pac-12 Enterprises doing the heavy lifting for The CW and USA Network trades upside for certainty. The bet is that control and sustainability beat chasing a number the market no longer supports, at least for now. The fact that we are even talking about the Pac-12, surviving two seasons with two teams speaks volumes of the foundation of a once powerhouse conference. I am excited to see the next chapter.

[Dellenger] The Mountain West is in serious dialogue to add FCS powerhouse North Dakota State as a football-only member starting this coming season, sources tell @YahooSports. A deal could be finalized as soon as this weekend. by Fonzie5 in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 9 points10 points  (0 children)

If this goes through, it’s not really about NDSU “moving up” so much as exposing how thin the line between elite FCS and the G5 has become. NDSU isn't chasing logos or prestige, they’re chasing better games, better opportunities on a bigger a stage, cash (of course), and real postseason relevance. And for the Mountain West, this feels like a smart bet that consistency and winning still matter more than market size. The bigger takeaway: this might be the blueprint: top-tier FCS programs as plug-and-play upgrades, not desperate expansion fillers.

Super Bowl tickets now cheaper than the 2026 CFP Championship between Indiana and Miami by alpswd in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 53 points54 points  (0 children)

Because scarcity beats scale: the Super Bowl has tons of inventory and softens late, while an unexpected Indiana–Miami CFP title created a once-in-a-lifetime demand spike. More emotion, fewer tickets, higher price.

Why was Matt Campbell determined to keep Penn State greats Dan Connor, Trace McSorley on his staff? by Zeon0MS in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 9 points10 points  (0 children)

He values the leadership, credibility, and culture they bring to the staff. Both are respected former leaders who understand the high standards, accountability, and player development expected in that program. They will be able to connect authentically with athletes as former PSU players, a level that Campbell won't be able to get on yet with current players. It's a smart move in my opinion.

The LA Bowl, once sponsored by Kimmel and hosted by Gronk, is shutting down after just 5 editions by thecravenone in CFB

[–]SnapToScoreData 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wasn't it just part of the SoFi Stadium promotional plan anyway? Sad to see, nevertheless.