Mike Bianchi: The College Football Playoff Has Arrived, But the Sport’s Soul Is Gone
ORLANDO, Fla. — The confetti cannons are loaded. The pristine, corporate-sponsored playoff logos are splashed across every screen. The national semifinals are set, promising a spectacle of elite athleticism. Yet, in living rooms across this football-obsessed nation, a hollow feeling persists. Amid the glare of the College Football Playoff’s grand arrival, a nagging sense echoes: we are watching a sport we no longer recognize, one whose soul feels auctioned to the highest bidder. The uncomfortable, urgent question the sport’s architects refuse to address is this: Is college football, in its relentless pursuit of money and expansion, systematically alienating the very fans who built its cathedrals and fueled its mythos?
The Poll That Spoke Volumes: A Lifelong Love Grows Cold
The evidence isn’t just in the constant channel-flipping or the half-empty student sections for non-playoff contenders. It’s in the quiet conversations among the lifers. Recently, on our radio show in the heart of a state that treats college football as religion, we posed a simple, telling poll: “What’s your excitement level for this year’s College Football Playoff?” The result was a gut punch. The runaway winner wasn’t “ecstatic” or “very high.” It was “Mild at best.”
This wasn’t a survey of casual observers. These are listeners in a city that hosts three bowl games, fans who have planned weddings around bye weeks and whose family traditions are painted in team colors. Their lukewarm response is a five-alarm fire for the sport. College football’s foundation was never just about championships; it was built on irrational, inherited passion. It was loyalty to a place, a family legacy, a shared identity. We believed the players and coaches were invested in that same identity. That core belief has been shattered.
The Pillars of Tradition Crumble Under a New Regime
So, what changed? The sport’s soul wasn’t lost in one fell swoop but eroded through a series of seismic shifts that prioritized commerce over community. The pillars that made college football unique have been systematically dismantled.
- The Transfer Portal Free-For-All: The portal, while granting athletes well-deserved freedom, has vaporized roster continuity and player identification. The beloved “project” player who develops over four years is an endangered species. Now, he’s a mercenary in shoulder pads, often hopping to the highest NIL bidder after a breakout season. How do you build a connection with a team that completely turns over every two years?
- NIL’s Unchecked Wild West: Name, Image, and Likeness was a necessary and just correction. But its lawless execution has created a blatant, unregulated pay-for-play system. Recruiting is now overtly about bidding wars, not a coach’s vision or a school’s tradition. The “collectives” aren’t supporting players; they are purchasing them. The competitive integrity of the sport is in question when rosters are built by booster checkbooks, not developmental coaching.
- Conference Realignment Greed: The Pacific-12 Conference is dead. The historic rivalries of the Big 12 and ACC are scattered. We are barreling toward two super-conferences where geography and history are irrelevant. What does it mean to win a “conference championship” in a league spanning from New Jersey to Los Angeles? The regional tribalism—the very heartbeat of the sport’s passion—is being stripped for television inventory.
- The Death of the Meaningful Regular Season: With a 12-team playoff, the regular season becomes a prolonged seeding exercise for the elite. For everyone else, it’s a fight for a participation trophy bowl game in a half-empty NFL stadium. The stakes of a single, painful loss in October are utterly diminished. The sport is sacrificing the weekly, must-win tension that made every Saturday feel like a referendum for a diluted chance at a longer postseason.
Predictions: A Widening Gulf and a Corporate Future
Where does this lead? The trajectory is clear, and it points toward a future that looks less like the passionate college game we knew and more like a minor-league professional entity.
First, the gap between the haves and have-nots will become a canyon. A dozen or so programs with the wealthiest collectives will form a permanent upper class, cycling top talent via the portal and NIL. The “Cinderella story” will be extinct; no amount of coaching magic can overcome a $5 million roster disparity.
Second, player movement will reach a frenzied peak. Rosters will see 30-40% turnover annually. Fans will need a program just to identify their own team, destroying any sense of legacy or long-term narrative. The emotional connection between team and town will be severed.
Finally, the sport will become fully optimized for television revenue at the expense of the stadium experience. Kickoff times will grow later, conferences will grow more absurdly vast, and the on-field product will be a homogenized, high-flying style designed for ratings. The pageantry, the quirky rivalries, the local flavor—all will be sanded down for a sleek, national product.
Can the Soul Be Reclaimed? A Faint Hope in the Chaos
Is there any path back? The task is Herculean, as the financial genies of NIL and TV contracts cannot be put back in the bottle. However, the sport’s stewards could take steps to re-anchor it to something resembling its roots. Imposing uniform NIL and transfer guidelines through collective bargaining with players would be a start, creating a semblance of competitive balance. Protecting a small number of protected, historic rivalries—mandating they be played annually regardless of conference—could preserve pockets of passion.
Most importantly, the narrative must change. The conversation cannot solely be about revenue shares and playoff brackets. Coaches, administrators, and media must champion the stories that still exist: the walk-on who stays, the senior who leads, the local kid playing for his hometown school. We must celebrate loyalty in an age of transactional relationships, or it will vanish completely.
The College Football Playoff has arrived, bigger and richer than ever. It is the culmination of the sport’s commercial ambition. But as we settle in to watch the expanded spectacle, the echo in the stadiums will grow louder. It’s the sound of a bond breaking. The fans—the lifers, the ones who built this—are feeling like strangers at their own family reunion. They can still appreciate the athletic brilliance on display, but the love, that irrational, heart-pounding love, is fading to a distant memory. And a sport without that soul is just a business with really good uniforms.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
