I don't think it will get fixed. And, I think at some point....it will hurt viewership of the sport.
It already has for me. I watch the Huskers and get attached to watching players perform and grow while playing for the Huskers. I enjoy watching them flash as underclassmen then explode as upperclassmen. Go from being "that guy Rudd or Suh" to hearing the stadium erupt every time they make a play.
I don't have the time or energy to learn and remember a whole new roster every year, and while I'll always root for the Huskers, watching 3 different QBs struggle to operate an offense three consecutive years two of them being transfers with no ties to the team is aggrevating at best. I for one would have loved to continue to cheer for AMart his last season and continue to celebrate the highs and lows of his journey as a player. This last year, same thing with Casey. Instead we get Sims.
This is why I never really cared to follow an NFL team. I want to watch my players on my team, not a collection of misfits suit up in Husker uniforms. It's like watching the Walking dead. After they killed off the last original character, was it even the Walking Dead anymore?
Aside from my own selfishness about the players I want to watch, I think the quality of football is greatly diminished as well. Instead of having 11 starters grow up in a system, understand the insides and out and then execute like a well oiled machine when they get thier opportunity, we have plug and play players across the line that continually mess up, make mistakes, and draw needless penalties because they can't run the system. This is causing offenses to become more uniform and destroys originality because coaches continually have to dumb down the playbook to ensure players can perform with the most basic understanding of the offensive system they are trying to run. Easiest way to make sure a plug and play player can contribute immediately is to run what everyone else runs. This is also, I believe, why NFL offenses always look so similar as well.
My oldest son is 11, the age when he is starting to really want to sit down, watch, and understand football. At that age, I was watching Touchdown Tommie, Brook Berringer, Ahman Green, Scott Frost, Eric Crouch, Kenny Cheatham and Bobby Newcombe, the Wistroms, the Peters, the Mackovickas, names I'll remember until I die or senility kicks in. First question my son asked this year during the first game was, "Wait, where is Casey Thompson?" Without connecting the Huskers to specific players he wants to root for, will he be a Husker fan in 10, 20 years? I don't know.