Lorewarn
Active member
@Wistrom Disciple All you're really arguing for is that you want more football players who aren't receiving scholarships. And all I can say is that I consider having thousands more students receiving scholarships (20 extra scholarships times 134 FBS teams = up to 2680 extra scholarships) to be a far, FAR better situation than simply having more players on a football team. If you disagree with that, well, alrighty then.
You're talking about different things, and putting words in their mouth they didn't say.
You're talking thousands more players getting scholarships. A good thing on it's own.
@Wistrom Disciple is talking about thousands more players never able to play college football. Both things are true. While there are potentially 2,680 players who will now receive D1 scholarships, there potentially 3,082 players who will be forced out of football altogether. The average FBS roster size was 128, and those 3,000 players will move down to FCS (simplifying here), where 3,000 players will then move down to DII, where 3,000 players will then move down to NAIA and DIII, and 3,000 of the players that were already playing NAIA/DIII ball will have nowhere to play.
Since FCS downwards have increasingly rare abilities to provide full scholarships, or don't provide scholarships at all, the amount gained in extra FBS scholarships is pretty much entirely nullified in the amount lost downstream, and for collegiate football players as a whole is pretty much a wash, except for the thousands who won't ever get a chance. But yeah, the very best ones have it better than before.