The NCAA Has Lost Control — This Is How You Save College Football
Artikel konnten nicht hinzugefügt werden
Der Titel konnte nicht zum Warenkorb hinzugefügt werden.
Der Titel konnte nicht zum Merkzettel hinzugefügt werden.
„Von Wunschzettel entfernen“ fehlgeschlagen.
„Podcast folgen“ fehlgeschlagen
„Podcast nicht mehr folgen“ fehlgeschlagen
-
Gesprochen von:
-
Von:
Über diesen Titel
College football is more chaotic than ever — coaches leaving mid-season, players entering the portal during bowl prep, NIL bidding wars, fractured schedules, and no unified leadership. In this episode, Trey Wingo and Breiden Fehoko dive head-first into the biggest question facing the sport: Can college football actually be fixed?
Fehoko brings an invaluable perspective as a former LSU standout who played in the pre-NIL era and has watched the sport transform into a decentralized, free-agency-driven ecosystem. He and Trey diagnose the root issue: there is no commissioner, no true authority, and no calendar structure. The result is a wild west of coaching departures, chaotic transfer windows, and programs blindsiding players right before the postseason.
The conversation explores several major problems:
Coaches hiding negotiations until players find out on social media
Athletes opting out mid-season with no consequences
Collectives functioning like quasi-NFL front offices without rules
The SEC and Big Ten quietly becoming the sport’s controlling bodies
The NCAA having zero credibility or influence
Fehoko argues that if the sport is going to behave like the NFL, it needs NFL-style rules: tampering windows, penalties for breaking contracts, defined transfer periods, and organizational discipline. Trey pushes the idea further — if college football insists on operating like a multi-billion-dollar professional enterprise, then it needs a true commissioner, someone like Nick Saban, who already exerts outsized influence behind the scenes.
They also revisit why the expanded playoff was created in the first place: not just for powerhouse brands, but to give teams like UCF, Boise State, Tulane, and JMU legitimate paths into national relevance. Fehoko lays out how expansion solved one problem but created new chaos: conflicting incentives, contradictory rankings, and conference champions getting rewarded while clearly better teams get left out.
This episode is a full audit of the sport — the problems, the incentives, the power brokers, and the solutions that could restore stability. If you care about the future of college football, this is one of the most important conversations you’ll hear.
