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The problem that is lurking down the road is that attention, coverage, adulation, whatever you want to call it, will be increasingly centralized. We've heard the refrain that watching eg, High A baseball appeals to some more than MLB because the sport is purer, perhaps more competitive. But we are a nation that loves to idolize the best. That's why no one watches the G League, or MiLB, or a myriad other sports leagues that aren't competitive at the highest level. The dollars between the superleagues and the rest will be so great, that games will become friends, family plus the hardcore. That's the nature of the beast. If this was confined to football, a crappy situation, but liveable. The problem is that it won't be confined to football. It will affect every facet of a school's athletic department. Inexorably, Rutgers will be able to pay their men's bb head coach five times what UConn can pay. Football team revenues for average superleague teams will be 10x what they are for UConn.
How this plays out in a process point of view is not altogether relevant. Only thing that can stave it off is a decline in football's dominance, through demographics (cf Pac12/UCLA) or CTE stuff.
How this plays out in a process point of view is not altogether relevant. Only thing that can stave it off is a decline in football's dominance, through demographics (cf Pac12/UCLA) or CTE stuff.