Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Colts fans feel betrayed following Luck’s retirement and deception that led up to it

Indiana sports fans will tolerate losing, but not a violation of trust.

Hoosiers do not like being lied to.  We trust easily, but once that trust is broken, good luck winning it back.

The Colts have not been forthcoming with answers about Andrew Luck’s health for as long as there have been questions about it.

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History shows Indiana natives are not kind to those who violate them.

  • In 2005, the United State Grand Prix forever burned its bridge with area race fans as seven teams on Michelin tires withdrew from the race moments before it began.  It was run in 2006 and 2007 in front of sparse crowds, and finally scuttled entirely in 2008.
  • In 2008, NASCAR had tire problems of its own at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  Tire changes were mandated every ten laps or so, and the result was a bunch of fans who felt cheated.  Attendance has waned ever since to the point where fewer than 50,000 show up for the race.  If you want to see 50,000 people appear to be a few hundred, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is your venue.  It regularly welcomes 300,000 for the Indy 500, and when fewer than 110K show up, it looks empty.
  • Between the “Malice at the Palace” in 2004 and two separate shooting incidents in 2007 involving Pacers players or family members, Pacers fans had a keen sense that players did not share their sense of decorum and civic pride.  Fans began avoiding games, and then when some of the offenders were dealt for a hodge lodge of ill-fitting parts, they lost interest entirely.  It’s taken a long time and serious work to rebuild interest in the team.  Attendance is still driven more by the quality of the opponent then civic interest in the team although they are becoming popular again with a young core of players, who seem model citizens as well as good players.

The Colts are edging ever closer to the tipping point where Indiana could lose interest in its NFL franchise.  Its handling of the Luck injuries that led to his retirement at age 29 was clumsy at best.  The team’s vague diagnoses of Luck’s maladies and inaccurate prognostications of when he would return have been a major annoyance.

Owner Jim Irsay talking about Luck’s “pristine bicep” still rings in fan’s ears.  The constant references to Luck “making progress” prior to being shut down in 2017 and retirement last Saturday night are recent irritants.

This is nothing new, despite a change in most positions other than ownership.  Back in 2008, I remember being in Terre Haute for training camp, seeing Peyton Manning with my own eyes, and 15-minutes later being told the Colts would not comment on rumors that he was even in Terre Haute.

Saturday night brought the ultimate indignity for fans.  They believed themselves to be the last to know Luck had retired.  They saw him laughing on the field at Lucas Oil Stadium, but also saw Adam Schefter’s tweet that his career was over.  Confusion reigned.  Boos accompanied Luck off the field as he left it for the last time as a rostered player not because he can’t take the pain, but because fans are fed up of the deception.

As with virtually all professional sports franchises, the Colts go out of their way to refer to their fans as “the best in the world”.  Fans are tired of lip service.  They want respect, and if they don’t get it, the adulation to which they have become accustomed might drift away.

It bears mention that general manager Chris Ballard has appeared to be very honest through his two-and-a-half years on the job, but Ballard’s level of honesty needs to be a contagion through the Colts building or there will come a reckoning.

Indianapolis is a city filled with very nice people, but shown a lack of respect, they can turn surly.  Just ask Formula One, NASCAR, and the Indiana Pacers.

Why Andrew Luck will never play for the Colts or in the NFL again

Colts fans will never see this again – it’s sad but true.

Four days after Colts quarterback Andrew Luck retired, people are already discussing the possibility of his return to the Colts.  No one can blame fans for indulging in that kind of hope.

Jacoby Brissett might be a solid starter in the NFL, but he is lacking the extraordinary physical tools that made Luck the top pick in the 2012 NFL Draft.  The Colts will simply not be as good as they might have been with Luck at quarterback.

It sucks for fans.  On the doorstep of what could have been a championship season, Luck’s retirement has turned fans surly and angry.  They pine for what might have been, and hope for what could be if Luck pivots back to the Colts.

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But the talk of Luck returning defies logic, and logic is always integral to Luck’s decision making.

When Luck announced he was retiring, he said “For the last four years or so, I’ve been in this cycle of injury, pain, rehab — injury, pain, rehab — and it’s been unceasing, unrelenting, both in season and off season…  I felt stuck in it, and the only way I see out is to no longer play football. It’s taken my joy of this game away.”

Two outcomes are possible as Luck rests to try to live a pain-free life.  One is the pain that has dogged him and stripped football of its joy lingers.  The other is the pain vanishes one day and Luck feels like a new man.

With every day the pain persists, it reinforces the danger of football to Luck in a most unpleasant way.  If the pain fades and then evaporates, it reinforces Luck’s decision to leave because he no longer wakes up in discomfort.  Both roads lead to the same place, and both validate his decision to leave the Colts and football behind.

Unless Luck develops amnesia, he will always believe football and pain are related.  Football and pain are inexorably tethered in his brain.  One cannot exist without the other.

Luck is a process-oriented decision maker.  He engages friends and family as resources in determining a course of action.  He processes the data, deliberates, and acts.  He’s a smart guy, and an elite level student.  Retirement was not a reflexive choice for Luck.  He knew what he was doing, and waited until the last possible moment to confirm what he had known for some time because he wanted to be certain that another year in the NFL was not for him or his family.

It’s likely that getting married and having a child on the way has broadened Luck’s perspective on what’s truly important, and getting the hell kicked out of him every Sunday is not it.  Neither is spending 16 hours a day in the Colts practice facility to prepare for 16 Sundays every fall.

It’s also important to remember that Luck’s dad Oliver played for the Houston Oilers for five seasons, and then graduated into a very successful professional career as an athletic administrator.  He is currently the commissioner of the XFL.

Luck is not some dolt who would be incapable of making a good living if not for the great game of football.  Whatever money he has in the bank this moment, today will be the least wealthy Luck is during his life.

As his dad did, Luck will embark on a second career that will leave time for his family and friends.  He will heal to the extent it’s possible, and move forward with his second act rather than remain in a pain-ridden suspended adolescence playing a young man’s game.

There is no room for a u-turn in Luck’s decision because none of the reasons for the decision he made public Saturday will change.

Luck has permanently turned the page.  Fans should too.

Archie Miller says daily talks continue to resume the IU vs. UK series

Archie Miller gave IU fans from Evansville exactly what they wanted last night. Can his team do it this November thru March?

Archie Miller doesn’t do a lot of press.  Some coaches are very receptive to the idea of chatting with media people about life and basketball.  Archie is not among them, and that’s just fine.

I have no problem with coaches – whose time is at a premium because of workouts, meetings, compliance, recruiting, and other responsibilities – deciding that media is the kind of time management termite they can live without.

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It makes Archie’s media availabilities all the more valuable, and when he took some media questions during a trip to Evansville for a speaking engagement, we listened.

He said a few things he said that were of note:

  • Mike Roberts was hired because he does virtually everything at the highest possible level.  He’s a proven recruiter, developer of talent, and is a tremendous competitor.  All good.  Roberts is also an IU alum, which is a good thing.  Let’s hope that assessment is accurate.
  • Jerome Hunter is as healthy physically and psychologically as he can be.  Whether that means Hunter will play for the Hoosiers in 2019-2020 remains to be seen, but he is a full participant in workouts.  His status is the most pressing question among IU fans because his absence was seen as one of the reasons for the Hoosiers struggles last season.
  • Archie LOVES Evansville!  He said, “This is one of my favorite cities in the state.  I come here as often as I can!”  It sounds funny because even people Evansville tend to be indifferent about their own hometown.  Archie’s effusive praise for the city was a reflection his affection for highly sought recruit Kristian Landers, a 6’1″ point guard ranked #16 in the 2021 class by 247sports.
  • Indiana and Kentucky are talking daily about resuming the basketball series that ended after Christian Watford sent IU fans into delirium at Assembly Hall almost eight years ago.  Kentucky coach John Calipari didn’t appreciate the loss or the chaos, so the plug was pulled on the annual home and home battle.  IU AD Fred Glass correctly insists the games be played on campus, while Calipari wants neutral courts because playing games where students can attend is of no importance to him.

In late August, we tend to get nothing but good news, so none of Archie’s comments were surprising, but it’s good that he continues to talk to fans across the state and recruit the hell out of Indiana because if you’re going to beat Kentucky – and everyone else – it’s a hell of a lot more fun and likely with native Hoosiers.

Six plausible explanations for Colts fans booing having nothing to do with Luck

Andrew Luck walks off the field for the final time – to a chorus of boos from those who remained.

There are a lot of factors that cause people to complain about things, and while some who booed Andrew Luck at the Colts vs. Bears game on Saturday night could have been genuinely pissed off at their former QB, most booed for other reasons.

Colts players who expressed their disappointment in fan behavior in today’s media availability should understand fan outrage is very rarely personal.

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Six factors that may have led to the booing are listed below:

6 – Chance to get on Sportscenter

ESPN loves to illustrate stories with video.  What better to show after Saturday night’s bizarre sequence of events than batshit angry fans booing as Luck left the field?  “Hey, let’s get on Sportscenter” has become a rallying cry for idiocy, and that might have prompted some of the boos.

5 – Fantasy Football players who blew a first round pick on Luck

People take fantasy football seriously, especially in leagues where there is a cash buy in.  For team owners who grabbed Luck in the first or second round, their season has ended before it began.  We are right in the middle of draft season, and Luck’s retirement might have caused the ruin of many teams.  Losing a guy to injury who was expected to deliver a lot of points, that’s one thing.  When a guy simply decides to retire, fans might get salty – especially after several man sodas on a Saturday night.

4 – Gamblers who grabbed a piece of the 15-1 action on Colts winning the Super Bowl

The Colts at 15-1 appeared to be a reasonable investment, but the odds immediately dropped to 30-1 when Luck’s retirement became public knowledge.  While the Colts will have 52 of the 53 players on the roster they expected on opening day in Los Angeles, the guy missing is the reigning NFL Comeback Player of the Year and appeared to be ready to enjoy his prime with a team worthy of his abilities.

3 – Season ticket holders pissed about money invested based upon Luck as the face of the franchise

Tickets are pricey, and so is travel.  A caller to Dan Dakich’s radio show today spoke about investing $18,000 in season tickets and putting together a family trip to Nashville to see Luck and the Colts play the Titans.  She feels defrauded by an organization that waited until the report broke on Twitter to get things straight with fans.

2 – Inebriates are prone to anger

What kind of Colts fans wait to leave Lucas Oil Stadium until the bitter end of a meaningless preseason game?  Guys and ladies who haven’t finished their beers yet, that’s who.  A three-hour game can easily become an eight-beer affair.  Yelling and booing becomes the primary mode of communication for those who overindulge.

1 – Fans upset with the perceived deceit from to Colts organization

Having been sold a bill of goods multiple times, Colts fans have not forgotten what they interpreted as lies regarding Luck’s health and the probability of a quick return to action.  It’s possible Colts owner Jim Irsay has spoken through a prism of hope rather than deception, but fans recall all too well phases like “the bicep is pristine!”  Trust takes a lifetime to build and a second to destroy.  Colts fans simply do not trust what they hear regarding Luck, because so little of it has been accurate.

 

Andrew Luck’s retirement prompts anger in some, respect from others, and provides solace for him #Colts

The earth under Marion County shook last night when a tweet reported Colts quarterback Andrew Luck would retire.

Some fans were angry as dreams of a potential championship season disappeared with his decision.  Others reflected on Luck’s desire to live his life without the constant pain he’s endured for years.

Allowing yourself to be relentlessly pummeled by behemoths in the name of competition and entertainment is a personal choice, and Luck has decided he doesn’t need to risk his health because a city wants to see another meaningful banner hung at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Luck has always been a reluctant face of the Colts.  Being a quarterback selected first overall comes with expectations and fame, and Luck is not a happily famous guy, even in Indy – a town that allows sports stars to exist in an environment as close to normal as any on the planet.

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Standing next to him at his locker during weekly media availabilities for the last five years, I never got the sense he enjoyed a single moment of those polite interrogations.  He tolerated the media as a responsibility, but never engaged with the interlopers who trespassed in his locker room and life.

Luck appeared to love the brotherhood driven by collective sacrifice that defines football.  He reveled in the games as an intellectual and physical test of preparation and will.  He seemed to dislike everything else.

The scales used to evaluate the worth and virtue of an endeavor versus the sacrifice finally tipped solidly toward the negative, so Luck decided to walk away.

And people reacted immediately and revealingly.

Angry fans view Luck as nothing more than a quarterback who could have led their favorite team to a championship.  Minus his position as QB of their beloved Colts, they have no use for him.  In their anger of what they perceive as a betrayal, those fans booed Luck last night at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Those who wish Andrew the best, view him through a more humane prism – as a husband, father-to-be, and man who made a personal decision to leave a public and painful career in favor of a different challenge.

Neither is right or wrong.  They just view the world and football in different ways.

Luck isn’t right or wrong either.  He made a decision, slept on it several times, and felt good enough about it pull the trigger on his exit.

The question for fans becomes – what kind of a season is Jacoby Brissett capable of authoring?  Those who respect Luck for his decision will ask what’s next for this uniquely gifted man.  And Luck will need to find a vocation to fill his days and quench his need to compete.

Last night’s announcement held a mirror to each of us.  We are comfortable with what we see in ourselves, but disturbed by how some others behave.

And Luck woke up this morning for the first time in years without embracing the challenges or dreading the sacrifices of being a quarterback.

 

Schedule released for IU Basketball – Hoosiers look bubblicious again

My optimism for Indiana Basketball needs to be validated at some point or I’m going to sound like one of those boobs in Bedford who predict a sixth National Championship before every season.

The schedule was released today, and I’m feeling very good about the chance for the Hoosiers to find a way back into the NCAA Tournament for the first time since the next to last season of the grim Tom Crean regime.

Indiana loses Juwan Morgan, Zach McRoberts, Evan Fitzner, and Romeo Langford while adding Butler grad-transfer Joey Brunk, and freshmen Trayce Jackson-Davis and Armaan Franklin.  They also lost Robert Forrester and Clifton Moore to transfer, but neither made an impact while in Bloomington.

The Hoosiers return a lot of productivity in Devonte Green, Justin Smith, Al Durham, Rob Phinisee, De’Ron Davis, Race Thompson, and Damezi Anderson.  Jerome Hunter appears to be regaining his health, so he may be an asset as well.

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If Hunter is back, the rotation appears to be solid at worst.  Phinisee, Green, Smith, Jackson-Davis, and Davis would feature a nice miss of experience and youth.  Add Brunk, Franklin, Hunter, Durham, and Thompson, and IU will have 10 guys who can contribute.

Let’s take a look at the schedule, and see if my positive waves can carry Indiana back to the Big Dance:

November games

Archie Miller is not going to win an award for challenging his team early, and rightly so.  Indiana needs wins, and they should throw a shutout during the season’s first  month.

  • v. Western Illinois (#291)
  • v. Portland State (#286)
  • v. North Alabama (#284)
  • v. Troy (#249)
  • v. Princeton (#175)
  • v. Louisiana Tech (#141)
  • v. South Dakota State (#92)

Interesting that last year’s Ken Pom ranking for each team improves with each opponent throughout November.  Scheduling tomato cans early can be a good or bad thing.  Either Indiana builds confidence through November with easy wins, or they forget to show up one night and really regret it on Selection Sunday.  Don’t sleep on South Dakota State.  They are always tough in the Summit League.  IU must go 7-0 in November.

December games

This is going to be an entirely different month for Miller and the Hoosiers with three event level challenges, two Big 10 games, and a game against an SEC opponent just for kicks.

  • v. Florida State – Big 10/ACC Challenge (#14) – L
  • @ Wisconsin (#16) – L
  • v. UConn – Jimmy V Classic at MSG (#98) – W
  • v. Nebraska (#47) – W
  • v. Notre Dame – Crossroads Classic at BLF (#97) – W
  • v. Arkansas (#54) – W

Minus UConn, this stretch is filled with coin flips – at best.  Florida State is always tough, and despite losing a lot of talent will be tough to beat.  Wisconsin at the Kohl Center is always a pain in the ass.  Notre Dame is improved.  Nebraska will take some time to get right under Fred Hoiberg.  Arkansas lost to Indiana by three in an NIT second round game to end its season last March.  Let’s say IU goes 4-2 in December for a 11-2 total.

January games

Nothing like starting the new year with a bang.  The Big 10’s most improved team is Maryland, and look where IU has to play first.  In the first seven Big 10 games of 2020, the Hoosiers play four games against the conference’s best three teams.  Paying attention to the ratings listed next to the teams might be a mistake.  They are for last season, and are not indicative of what  come be in 2020.

As mentioned, Maryland will be improved, but Purdue and Michigan will likely take a step back.  Predicting in August how these games will shake out individually is a fun waste of time.  What the hell else do I have to do?  Look ahead to the Colts preseason game tomorrow night?

@ Maryland (#24) – IU loses after hanging around for the first 35 minutes.  Hey, if I’m going to go to the trouble to predict, I want to be specific.  L

v. Northwestern (#74) – I know this isn’t 1992 any more, but I refuse to believe Indiana will lose to Northwestern at Assembly Hall.  W

v. Ohio State (#44) – Good bellwether game.  If IU is to be taken seriously, a home contest against a quality opponent like the Buckeyes is the kind they need to win.  W

@ Rutgers (#78) – Steve Pikiell is is good coach, but it’s still early for Rutgers to ascend to respectability in the Big 10.  L

@ Nebraska (#47) – Year one for Fred Hoiberg is the time to get the Cornhuskers.  W

v. Michigan State (#3) – For some reason, IU has had success at home against really good teams, but I can’t pick against a stacked Spartans team and maintain any credibility – even in my own mind.  L

v. Maryland (#24) – Tough game.  If IU wins, it will be a home upset.  L

@ Penn State (#43) – IU beat Penn State last season in Happy Valley, so why not do it again?  W

IU finishes it’s first month of Big 10 games 4-4, and are now 15-6.

February games

@ Ohio State (#44) – Hoosiers lose big on the second half of back-to-back road games this week.  L

v. Purdue (#9) – Guessing Indiana and Purdue will be fighting for position in this game.  I’ll take IU at home.  W

v. Iowa (#37) – Love seeing Fran McCaffery angry, and nothing will make Fran madder on this cold Thursday night than the Hoosiers throttling his Hawkeyes.  W

@ Michigan (#6) – Whether Juwan Howard can coach is anyone’s guess.  I’m guessing Michigan will be good enough to win this game in Ann Arbor.  L

@ Minnesota (#46) – Winning in the Barn is tough.  L

v. Penn State (#43) – I will never pick against IU at home against Penn State.  It’s the principle of the thing.  W

@ Purdue (#9) – Matt Painter always seems to have the Boilers ready to play Indiana at Mackey. L

IU treads water in a tough February – finishing the month 3-4 for a record of 18-10

March games

@ Illinois (#84) – Brad Underwood will finally have Illinois playing better basketball this season.  L

v. Minnesota (#46) – Hoosiers get revenge for earlier loss at Minnesota.  

v. Wisconsin (#16) – Indiana ends the regular season with a bang, not a whimper as Gard’s guards fail to guard.  W

Indiana ends March 2-1 before heading up the road to Indy for the long-awaited return of the Big 10 Tournament to the city where it belongs.  Hoosiers finish the regular season 20-11, and a Big 10 record of 10-10.

Big 10 Tournament

It’s sheer insanity to pick Indiana to win any games in this unholy abomination of an event (IU is 12-22 all-time without a single championship).  L

Indiana finishes the season 20-12, 10-11, and is forced to sit uncomfortably perched on the bubble as the bracket is revealed for the NCAA Tournament.

The development of the freshmen, Hunter’s health, and some consistent toughness of Green and Smith would help Indiana win a couple of extra games and vault IU into the top five in the Big 10.

Sadly for teams like IU, the hires of coaches like Pikiell and Underwood continues to raise the bottom have of the conference, and makes it tough for a program like Indiana to see the results of their improvement in the Big 10.

 

Colts have a potential gaping hole at QB if Brissett or Walker gets hurt vs. Bears or Bengals

If Luck can’t play in LA, here are the Colts two quarterbacks – Jacoby Brissett and Phillip Walker. If either in hurt in the final two preseason games, it could cost the Colts their season.

Taking a chance on Chad Kelly as a favor to his Uncle Jim might have terrible consequences for the Indianapolis Colts.

Colts coach Frank Reich has been asked many times and in many ways the last two days whether Jacoby Brissett will be among the starters who will sit Saturday night against the Chicago Bears at Lucas Oil Stadium.  It’s a great question.

Saving a back-up quarterback during the third preseason game is virtually unprecedented in the history of these useless events, but in this case it’s a virtual certainty because losing Brissett to injury would cause roster chaos, even if Andrew Luck is healthy for the opener.

That’s because Chad Kelly will serve a suspension during the first two weeks of the regular season because he wandered into the home of some people he didn’t know – and more importantly who didn’t know him – following Broncos teammate Von Miller’s 2018 Halloween party.  Kelly reportedly sat on the couch mumbling incoherently with the residents of the home, who responded to the intrusion by hitting Kelly with a vacuum cleaner tube until he left.

Here are three possible scenarios:

  • Luck is healthy enough to play during the opener against the Chargers, but Brissett gets hurt against the Bears or Bengals.  Walker becomes the back-up for a quarterback who was not healthy enough to take a single snap in the preseason.  Not good.
  • Luck can’t go in LA, and Brissett is healthy because he sat the last two preseason games but Phillip Walker gets hurt.  That leaves Brissett as the starter and the back-up quarterback would be, well, nobody.  Also not good.
  • Brissett gets hurt and Luck can’t go.  Walker is be the only eligible and healthy quarterback on the roster.  Really not good.

So all of a sudden, the collective health of the Colts at the quarterback position is important in the extreme.  If any of the quarterbacks, other the Kelly, get hurt in the remaining two preseason games, the Colts will need to find another quarterback as quickly as they did at the end of the 2017 preseason when Brissett was acquired in exchange for Phillip Dorsett in a deal with the Patriots.

Brissett being backed up by Walker is a reason for sleepless nights among the Colts coaching staff, but Brissett or Walker being backed up by nobody is a worst case scenario that’s a season wrecker.

Almost makes the last two preseason games worth watching.

Might cost a little money – but moving Bucket Game to Lucas Oil Stadium makes sense

Granted, this is during halftime when thousands flock to their tailgates for a freshener, but the student section at last year’s Bucket Game – with a bowl invitation on the line – was nearly empty.

Because the Old Oaken Bucket Game between Indiana and Purdue is played on the Saturday following Thanksgiving, both IU and Purdue students are home for the long weekend rather than in Bloomington and West Lafayette.

That’s the argument for moving the Bucket Game from a rotating home and home series to Lucas Oil Stadium.  If students can’t attend, why host the game on an empty Indiana or Purdue campus?

Lucas Oil Stadium isn’t quite equidistant from both IU and Purdue, but it’s close enough (72.7 miles from Ross-Ade Stadium and 51.5 miles from Memorial Stadium) to be equally convenient for boosters, and serves as a closer spot for all the students of both universities who have homes in Indianapolis.

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There are very likely more IU and Purdue students who are season ticket holders within 10 miles of Lucas Oil Stadium than on either campus on the last Saturday of college football’s regular season.

This wasn’t a problem until 2010 – the first year the Bucket Game was regularly scheduled for the Saturday after Thanksgiving.  Prior to that, it was usually played on the Saturday before Thanksgiving, when students needed a break from studying for pre-break tests.  It was a raucous party back then.  Now, the bleachers at Memorial Stadium are mostly untested by student posteriors.

There are complications to moving the game to Lucas Oil Stadium – like money.  It always comes down to cash, right?  Ross-Ade and Memorial Stadia are owned and operated by the universities they serve.  Lucas Oil Stadium is available for a steep price to those who wish to rent it.

Another complexity is Lucas Oil Stadium is already booked that weekend by the IHSAA for six state high school football championships.  That problem can be negotiated away, but the unpleasantness of displacing the high school championships would leave a lasting mark.

Another option, likely the least popular among them, would be to move the Bucket Game to a weekend earlier in the season.  If the Bucket Game was contested the fourth Saturday in September each season, the game would regularly sell-out on both campuses.  But who wants the Bucket Game to be played in September?  If the final game of IU’s season came against Rutgers, it would be played in front of friends and family only.

There isn’t a perfect answer, but one thing is for sure – it makes very little sense for the biggest rivalry game at both universities to be played on an empty campus.

For whom is greed in college athletes a problem? Not schools, shoes, or athletes, so why adopt the real fix?

Cleaning up college basketball is easy.  But it requires a difficult decision, so it will never get done.

As we learned (again) last week as Michael Avenatti’s lawyers filed briefs detailing Nike’s authorization to pay Zion Williamson $35,000 or more and $20,000 to Romeo Langford, shoe companies routinely pay families of athletes in an effort to steer them toward schools they invest in.

Some of the payments are legal – as with the cash given to fathers who run summer basketball programs affiliated with a shoe company.  Some are not – like the cash reportedly given to Brian Bowen’s father by Adidas.

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All of the payments, legal and illegal, have one purpose – to raise the profile of a shoe company by compelling a player to commit to one of the schools that shoe company sponsors.

Shoe companies pay a significant amount of money to align itself with a school and its basketball program.  Steering players to those programs is a way for them to proactively guarantee return on their investment.

The solution that will scrub the cash flow from shoe companies to player families is simple – strip the return on investment from the equation.  Ban shoe companies from investing millions of dollars in sponsorship agreements with schools.

That would fix the issue once and for all, but schools don’t want to turn off that cash spigot.  See, the schools want as much cash as they can get, but work hard to deny athletes that same opportunity.  I’m not screaming for the legalization of shoe company payments to athletes, just stating the obvious hypocrisy of allowing schools the opportunity to profit while deny athletes the same privilege.

Big time programs get a ton of money from shoe companies.  A total of greater than $300-million is invested by Nike, Adidas, and Under Armour for the ability to throw their shoes on the feet of athletes, and logos on the coaches’ shirts and players’ jerseys.  The leader in the clubhouse for cash gained through a shoe deal is UCLA – the Bruins get $9-million each year from Under Armour.

Think Under Armour is going to stand idly by and hope football coach Chip Kelly and hoops coach Mick Cronin are able to compel enough talented athletes to pledge UCLA to make that investment pay off?  Or are they more likely to peel off a few Benjamins to ensure it?

Turn off the shoe cash to schools, and offers of improper inducements will evaporate, but what school is willing to take that stand?  When was the last time you heard of a business, person, or organization of any kind to say no to quick cash?

So the cycle of impermissible payments will continue, and occasionally someone is going to be a dumbass about it and get caught.  The outrage machine will gear up for a couple of news cycles before drifting into the recesses of our consciousness – again.  Now and then, the NCAA will impanel a wacky group of do-gooders who will propose all kinds of idiotic fixes – like the latest chaired by Condoleezza Rice that came to the absurd conclusion that the cause of recruiting violations was the construct of summer basketball.

That made sense to nobody outside the Rice Commission.

A more reasonable assessment would have been that the current environment is the product of  a free market run by the cabal of sweatsuit clad shoe guys, which is beyond the scope of NCAA enforcers.

Fixing the problem is easy but expensive for athletic departments already awash with extreme wealth driven by wildly lucrative media deals.  Enough is a word foreign to presidents and trustees who demand more athletic money for university projects.  No such thing for coaches as too much money.  No such thing as enough ROI for the shoe companies trying to moving product based upon alignment with a football and men’s basketball program.

Pretending to fix the problem by presenting silly solutions that have nothing to do with the root problem of greed is what we’ve come to expect.  And that’s what will be delivered every time outrage erupts – because the fix is to say no to cash, and NO ONE wants that.

Raiders Antonio Brown is either crazy or wants to sit out the preseason

Antonio Brown has million dollar hands, frostbitten feet, and a brain that doesn’t want to be protected.

Wide receivers are crazy, and the better they are, the crazier they are allowed to be.

Oakland Raiders wide receiver Antonio Brown is really good, has become really crazy, and the Raiders now have no choice but to embrace it.

When he played for the Steelers, Brown’s antics expressing displeasure with the offense and quarterback Ben Roethlisberger were a Sportscenter staple.  They decided he was no longer worth the trouble or money, and accepted a third and fifth round pick to get rid of the best receiver in the game.

We’ve said its a million times – never invite crazy to a party.  When you invite crazy to the party, the party gets crazy.  The Raiders not only invited crazy to their party, they dealt those two picks to get him.

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The NFL has ruled that the helmet Brown prefers is unsafe.  He refuses to wear a different model helmet that has been approved by the NFL, so he is not allowed to play.  Brown is either using that to avoid training camp, or he’s truly bananas.

Brown’s agent Drew Rosenhaus appeared on ESPN’s Get Up this morning and said “Antonio wants to resolve this and be with his team.”  Really?  There are 90 guys in NFL camps with 31 teams and 89 with the Raiders.  That’s 2,879 players who are wearing NFL compliant helmets, and one with a problem.

Let’s remember why the NFL enacted rules about helmet safety.  Deaths from CTE and a subsequent lawsuit that cost the NFL $765 million spoke loudly to the league, and a serious look at brain safety led the NFL to mandate helmets meet a standard Brown’s does not.

To look at one of the many former players suffering from football related brain ailments that seriously degrade quality of life and decide to ignore the guidance of neurologists, well, that level of crazy is advanced.

Brown also has a foot issue caused by cryotherapy that went awry, but let’s not even get into the stupidity of a guy who runs for a living welcoming frostbite to his feet.

Talent wins football games, but not talent alone.  Brown has talent – a lot of talent.  But that talent is countered by a level of nuts that makes productivity hard to predict.  In fact, it makes attendance hard to predict, as the Steelers found out last year.

Winning NFL games is hard enough without a crazy wide receiver demanding to be allowed to put at risk his longterm health by wearing a helmet with which he’s comfortable.

The Raiders traded two middle round picks for the best receiver in football, and they might have been fleeced.  That’s the NFL.