Current:Home > FinanceKentucky's Mark Stoops gives football coaches a new excuse: Blame fans for being cheap-InfoLens
Kentucky's Mark Stoops gives football coaches a new excuse: Blame fans for being cheap
View Date:2024-12-23 11:43:11
Thanks to Mark Stoops, coaches now have a new excuse for getting humiliated by No. 1 Georgia: fan cheapness.
In response to Kentucky's 38-point loss to Georgia, Stoops asked fans to throw money at the problem. When a caller on Stoops' radio show asked the veteran coach about Kentucky's flops against elite teams, Stoops got defensive. Later, he cited Georgia's NIL riches and suggested UK fans should cough up more cash.
Never mind that Stoops’ teams went 0-8 against Georgia, with an average margin of defeat of 22.4 points, before NIL deals became permissible in 2021. He's now 0-11 against the Bulldogs.
Want to catch Georgia? Spend, baby, spend.
"I just encourage (fans) to donate more, because that’s what those teams are doing," Stoops said. "I can promise you, Georgia, they bought some pretty good players. You’re allowed to these days, and we could use some help. That’s what they look like, you know what I mean, when you have 85 of them. So, I encourage anybody that’s disgruntled to pony up some more (money)."
STAY UP-TO-DATE: Subscribe to our Sports newsletter for exclusive content
Here we have a $9 million coach whose improvement plan centers on fans writing a blank check so Kentucky can go on a shopping spree. Why bother employing a coach? Put a fundraising extraordinaire in charge of this operation.
Stoops’ comments came off as defensive blame-shifting, but his excuse also is somewhat clever, because it can’t be disproven.
We can speculate as to what Georgia quarterback Carson Beck earns in NIL, compared to Kentucky’s Devin Leary. We don't know for sure. NIL deals are not subject to public disclosure.
Undeniably, Georgia enjoys advantages over Kentucky. What coach wouldn’t want to recruit a home state as talent-rich as Georgia’s, while facing little instate competition? With or without NIL, Georgia’s realities position the Bulldogs to succeed at a higher level than Kentucky.
Still, Stoops and his team bear some responsibility for this hammering. In another defensive moment during his radio show, Stoops rhetorically asked whether fans would prefer to return to 2012, the final season before his arrival. No Kentucky fan should want that. Stoops raised Kentucky’s bar, making performances like Saturday’s objectionable. That's the price of success.
Own the loss, and go beat No. 25 Missouri this week at Kroger Field.
In one breath, Stoops deemed UK's performance against Georgia unacceptable. In the next, he laid it at the feet of NIL.
The extent to which NIL factored into a 38-point loss can’t be verified, making it a handy excuse.
We can guess that Georgia’s NIL collective enjoys more football riches than Kentucky’s, but these collectives that collect booster- and fan-donated dollars are not subject to financial disclosure.
I know how much revenue Georgia athletics ($203 million) generated in 2022, compared to Kentucky ($159 million). Those are figures that must be disclosed annually to the NCAA. Those revenues do not reflect NIL funding, though. The amount of cash each collective has piled inside its NIL vaults is not public record.
Also, there’s little accountability for collectives and coaches who are poor stewards of NIL funds. Say a collective blew $250,000 in an NIL deal to a player who becomes a bust. Tough to hold anyone accountable for a deal shrouded in mystery.
Meanwhile, Stoops asks fans to prime the pump. Fill the war chest.
And when Kentucky loses to Georgia again next year? Spend some more.
I sympathize with Stoops. Succeeding at Kentucky isn’t easy, but that didn’t start with NIL. Kentucky hasn’t beaten Georgia since 2009.
Thanks to NIL, though, when a coach suffers a humiliating result, he can reposition blame on the fans. Convince fans their cheapness contributed to this debacle.
Who can prove Stoops is wrong, or that NIL didn’t factor in, when we don’t know Georgia's average NIL deal compared to Kentucky’s?
College football coaches know no shame when asking fans for more money.
Coaches, and to a greater extent athletics directors, have long doubled as glorified panhandlers. They’d convince donors that State U’s poor team couldn’t possibly compete with the fellas from Rival U unless the fat cats ponied up to fund facilities that challenged the Taj Mahal as a wonder of the world.
Now, at least, the panhandling extends to milking donors to bankroll the players behind this lucrative enterprise.
“No excuses,” Stoops said repeatedly during his radio show.
Then, Stoops played the pauper and held out his hand.
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's SEC Columnist. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer.
veryGood! (58)
Related
- Pedro Pascal's Sister Lux Pascal Debuts Daring Slit on Red Carpet at Gladiator II Premiere
- Beijing court begins hearings for Chinese relatives of people on Malaysia Airlines plane
- Congolese Nobel laureate kicks off presidential campaign with a promise to end violence, corruption
- Male soccer players in Italy put red marks on faces in campaign to eliminate violence against women
- Volunteer firefighter accused of setting brush fire on Long Island
- Kourtney Kardashian’s Son Reign Disick Reveals How He Wants to Bond With Baby Brother
- 2 more women file lawsuits accusing Sean Diddy Combs of sexual abuse
- Missing dog rescued by hikers in Colorado mountains reunited with owner after 2 months
- LSU leads college football Week 11 Misery Index after College Football Playoff hopes go bust
- Where to watch 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer': TV channel, showtimes, streaming info
Ranking
- Kevin Costner says he hasn't watched John Dutton's fate on 'Yellowstone': 'Swear to God'
- Turned down for a loan, business owners look to family and even crowdsourcing to get money to grow
- Why Finland is blaming Russia for a sudden influx of migrants on its eastern border
- 3-year-old shot and killed at South Florida extended stay hotel
- Reds honor Pete Rose with a 14-hour visitation at Great American Ball Park
- Playing in the Dirty (NFC) South means team can win the division with a losing record
- Syria says an Israeli airstrike hit the Damascus airport and put it out of service
- Man pleads to 3rd-degree murder, gets 24 to 40 years in 2016 slaying of 81-year-old store owner
Recommendation
-
McDonald's Version: New Bestie Bundle meals celebrate Swiftie friendship bracelets
-
Girl, 11, confirmed as fourth victim of Alaska landslide, two people still missing
-
Thousands of fans in Taylor Swift's São Paulo crowd create light display
-
Stock market today: Asian shares mostly decline, as investors watch spending, inflation
-
Jelly Roll goes to jail (for the best reason) ahead of Indianapolis concert
-
Linda Evangelista Says She Hasn't Dated Since Before CoolSculpting Incident
-
Dogs gone: Thieves break into LA pet shop, steal a dozen French bulldogs, valued at $100,000
-
Barnes’ TD, Weitz three field goals lift Clemson to 16-7 victory over rival South Carolina