by
22 Comments
Appearing on Another Dooley Noted Podcast, the former Florida and South Carolina head coach Steve Spurrier said that he feels "a little bad" for Mississippi State due to the "huge NIL fund" that their in-state rival Ole Miss have to work with.
quote:

“In a way, I feel a little bad for Mississippi State because Ole Miss has a huge NIL fund,” Steve Spurrier said. “I don’t know what they’re spending but they’re spending right there with Ohio State and Texas and all those schools. And poor Mississippi State, I don’t think they’re spending much. They don’t have it to spend.”

(The Spun)
Filed Under: SEC Football
22 Comments
user avatar
user avatar
MC560115 months
CFB is living in a world with unlimited salary cap. We're already starting to see about 5-10 teams that can afford to pay on a whole different level than the rest. Championship winners will directly correlate to spending and if this remains unchecked it will be the downfall of the sport
user avatar
Clark1415 months
Yep, seems like Saban was ridiculed for speaking up about it.
user avatar
Datbayoubengal15 months
@Clark14 it wasn't the message, it was the messenger with Saban.
user avatar
theballguy15 months
Yep. Humans are petty. Water is wet.
user avatar
HonoraryCoonass15 months
Schools should not be able to participate/facilitate in NIL. No fundraising, no brokering deals, no promising money. All that should be up to the player to solicit and manage.
user avatar
austiger15 months
It is ridiculous. State has been competitive for years, and now they're at a terrible disadvantage. Not good for the sport.
user avatar
InVolNerable15 months
Lol, no it's not. Who gives a frick about Mississippi State? If they can't keep up, that's on them; let their football team and university crumble.
user avatar
DeafVallyBatnR15 months
I feel sorry for College Football
user avatar
QB15 months
there has to be a cap to the NIL, and then the schools can get back to cheating again.
If there is no salary/spending cap for players, then it will be less than 5 years that there will be a perpetual top 5 every year, and football will lose its luster to most fans.
user avatar
Morpheus15 months
Yeah it’s on a non sustainable plane right now. For anyone, without implosion.
user avatar
InVolNerable15 months
Americans love communism in their sports.
user avatar
TooFyeToFly15 months
The Yankees, Lakers, and Cowboys say hi.
user avatar
wesman2115 months
If they don't have a cap on NIL, college football can easily become like the MLB where you can spend to win (for the most part).
user avatar
Jay Quest15 months
NIL makes players free agents after every year. It's not a smart way to keep fans interested in the product.
user avatar
Dingeaux15 months
there will have to be a limit eventually. It will be like the NFL before the salary cap.

However, a lot of changes will have to occur before a cap can be introduced and enforced
user avatar
Ace Midnight15 months
And then the Bamas of the world will cheat the "limit" and get away with it. Sure, LSU and aTm will cheat, too, but will get caught and punished.

:meetthenewboss:
user avatar
Its dumb that this is supposed to be a competition and we have an unequal playing field. Need a salary cap and narrow it down to whatever schools want to play in a pro league, and everyone else play in a different league
user avatar
lastfan15 months
Then teams would just pay them under the table to supplement the NIL cap. The schools who were best at cheating before would rule the roost once again.
user avatar
morganwadefan15 months
I just rewatched the ‘92 game when Shane Matthews was giving away interceptions like Oprah gives away cars. Funny watching Spurrier give up coaching and just pick blades of grass off the field, lol.
user avatar
Lock,Stock15 months
Poor State?? lol they have been paying players for years, just like the majority of the SEC. Don’t feel sorry for them.
user avatar
BigTigerJoe15 months
Free enterprise baby.
Popular Stories
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on X and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter