Death of College Football in the Northeast | Syracusefan.com

Death of College Football in the Northeast

FasterCuse

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Interesting video on the death of college football in the Northeast. I think we’ve debated many of the topics ad nauseam, but also some good points brought up about fractured state school system in NY.
 
Yeah this is a bit of hyperbole. No question that SU/Pitt/BC are at a disadvantage because of ACC money vs SEC/B10 money. But we and the others are still competitive and obviously PSU is more than competitive.

Oh and Rutgers has been dead for years
 
PSu is not in the east any more

What happens if you pull OSU out of the mid west or Clemson from the East coast or ALA/GA from the south.

And without Oregon what has the west done?
 
I think it’s the opposite. One thing the video did not bring up was NIL. Northeast talent volume is definitely lower than other regions in the country, but the volume of FBS programs and P4 programs is also lower. The northeast has plenty of talent to service most of the needs for the P4 programs that exist in this region. Also, what NIL is changing is the ability to keep northeast players home and taken care of instead of going to the factory schools hoping to get there opportunity to play and make enough of an impression to get paid in the NFL. Local talent that can get offers from the factory schools can now get paid at home and increase the likelihood of playing sooner. NIL makes it much more difficult for the factory schools to keep 4 star talent benched for development on its rosters for 3 years to maybe get the opportunity to play big time college football.
 
I think it’s the opposite. One thing the video did not bring up was NIL. Northeast talent volume is definitely lower than other regions in the country, but the volume of FBS programs and P4 programs is also lower. The northeast has plenty of talent to service most of the needs for the P4 programs that exist in this region. Also, what NIL is changing is the ability to keep northeast players home and taken care of instead of going to the factory schools hoping to get there opportunity to play and make enough of an impression to get paid in the NFL. Local talent that can get offers from the factory schools can now get paid at home and increase the likelihood of playing sooner. NIL makes it much more difficult for the factory schools to keep 4 star talent benched for development on its rosters for 3 years to maybe get the opportunity to play big time college football.

Interestingly, MaxPreps just put out an article on where every player on the remaining CFP teams went to high school. Obviously, a lot of this is driven by who is in the game (Texas, Ohio and Pennsylvania are all highly represented), but I found it interesting that there are 38 guys from the Northeast. That number goes to 56 if you include the DMV (which is mostly within a 6-hour radius from Syracuse). The northeast will never compete with Texas/the southeast when it comes to high school talent, but there is still talent to be had in the region.

CFP Player States.jpg


 
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Not sure if they still give out the Lambert Trophy to the best Northeast football team, but the standings this year would seem to prove this narrative is either false or the northeast is on the rebound

Penn State 13-2 (in CFP semis)
Army - 12-2 (AAC Champions/Bowl win)
Syracuse - 10-3 (Bowl win)
Navy - 10-3 (Bowl win)
Buffalo - 9-4 (Bowl win)
UConn - 9-4 (Bowl win)
Boston College - 7-6
Rutgers - 7-6
West Virginia - 6-7
Pitt - 7-6
Maryland - 4-8
Temple - 3-9
UMass - 2-10

*I don't think of Maryland or Navy as Northeast schools, but I believe they were counted by that group.
 

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