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Coach talks to Dennis Dodd on College Football Rebounds and High-Profile Coaching Carousel

19 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Coach talks to Dennis Dodd on College Football Rebounds and High-Profile Coaching Carousel

Descripción

Coach is joined by college football writer Dennis Dodd to discuss several prominent football programs that have fallen from national championship status and their potential for a rebound. They evaluate the future of USC under Lincoln Riley, Florida State under Mike Norvell, and Clemson under Dabo Swinney. Dodd shares his perspective on the strengths and challenges facing each program, highlighting USC's strong recruiting class and Florida State's need for a turnaround season. The conversation then transitions to recent coaching changes, including Matt Campbell's move to Penn State, James Franklin's shift to Virginia Tech, and Kyle Whittingham's new role at Michigan. Dodd provides context on each coach's background, past successes, and expectations in their new positions, while also briefly touching upon recent developments within the Big 12 conference. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

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100 episodios

episode Forklift Systems Football Saturday 5-30-26 artwork

Forklift Systems Football Saturday 5-30-26

On this episode of Forklift Systems Football Saturday , Coach dives deep into the major takeaways from the recent SEC and Big Ten Spring Meetings. Joined by "Mr. College Football" Tony Barnhart, the two unpack the ongoing debate between SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti regarding the potential expansion of the College Football Playoff from 12 to 24 teams, as well as the push for more conference self-governance. In the second hour, college football experts Dennis Dodd and Charles Davis jump in to analyze the sweeping implications of the bipartisan Cruz-Cantwell bill—also known as the Protect College Sports Act—which attempts to address NIL, antitrust exemptions, transfer rules, and the looming reality of athlete employment. Additionally, Tennessee Education Lottery CEO Rebecca Paul drops by to share a positive fiscal update, projecting up to $455 million transferred for state educational programs this year See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Ayer1 h 59 min
episode FSFS- Dennis Dodd artwork

FSFS- Dennis Dodd

Coach is joined by Dennis Dodd to analyze the rapidly evolving and increasingly divided landscape of college athletics, specifically focusing on the financial dominance of the Big Ten and SEC. Dodd explains how recent proposals, like a 24-team playoff, have exposed deep fractures between conferences, with the Big 12 and ACC pushing for the expansion while the SEC and Big Ten resist it. The discussion also covers the severe undervaluation of college sports media rights, noting that keeping broadcasts restricted to individual conference silos drastically diminishes their potential market value compared to pooling them. This growing instability has led prominent figures like Texas Tech's Cody Campbell to heavily lobby for federal intervention to save and regulate college athletics. A major focal point of the conversation is the bipartisan Cruz-Cantwell bill, which attempts to stabilize the industry by granting the NCAA a narrow antitrust exemption, capping compensation, and strictly regulating player transfers. Despite its ambitious goals, Dodd expresses strong skepticism about the bill's viability, suggesting it is highly unlikely to pass in its current form due to upcoming Congressional recesses and widespread reluctance to intervene. To conclude, Dodd outlines five possible paths forward for the future of the sport: federal legislative codification, self-governance led by the powerhouse conferences, corporate spin-offs where schools form separate LLCs for athletics, formal collective bargaining for players, or simply maintaining a status quo defined by endless litigation. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Ayer28 min
episode FSFS - CHARLES DAVIS & DENNIS DODD artwork

FSFS - CHARLES DAVIS & DENNIS DODD

Coach is joined by Charles Davis and Dennis Dodd, The conversation begins with a discussion regarding the spring meetings of the Big Ten conference, which recently took place at a resort in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. Charles notes that the conference is feeling very positive about itself, highlighted by the prominent display of recent national championship trophies at the meeting's registration. A significant shift at this year's meeting was the inclusion of the media, which had historically been discouraged from attending. This allowed Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti to publicly reaffirm his commitment to a 24-team playoff format, which emerged as the dominant topic of the meetings despite other minor issues being raised. The participants then delve into the concept of "self-governance" within collegiate athletics, particularly concerning how the major conferences might establish their own rules independently of traditional oversight. Dennis outlines that self-governance would not mean conferences breaking away entirely, but rather choosing how to manage internal affairs such as collective bargaining, player compensation, enforcement of rules, and transfer eligibility while still competing against other schools. They express skepticism about current enforcement methods, recalling past failures when conferences attempted self-policing, which often led to internal friction and instability. Finally, the discussion touches upon the potential conflict between state laws and a unified national standard for college athletics. The speakers contemplate a scenario where individual states, like Texas, might pass independent laws governing athletic programs, which could create a chaotic patchwork of regulations across the country unless a federal law is established to create a single national standard. Charles suggests that if the major conferences do not find a way to effectively govern themselves, they may eventually be forced to adopt a professionalized model similar to the NFL or NBA, complete with a dedicated commissioner and a board of governors to manage the sport's future. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Ayer18 min
episode FSFS- Tony Barnhart artwork

FSFS- Tony Barnhart

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Ayer45 min
episode High School Sports Saturday With Tate Mathews 05-30-26 artwork

High School Sports Saturday With Tate Mathews 05-30-26

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Ayer59 min