"Sue For Anything" Misframes The Story
Context
Show pushback on the recurring fan-traditionalist narrative that "you can sue for anything these days" is what brought college football to its current structural chaos. The reframe: the lawsuits weren't frivolous, and pinning the chaos on the players gets the causation backwards.
The actual structural cause is the incumbent power structure (NCAA, conferences, athletic departments) seeing the writing on the wall and choosing to fight rather than adapt. That refusal is what produced the eventually-forced changes — NIL, portal mobility, revenue share, the rest. The chaos is the cost of late-stage adaptation by an unwilling regulator, not the cost of player greed.
The show notes this is a tale as old as time and not specific to college football: an old power structure does everything it can to keep things in place, then the world collapses, then they're not in any position to adapt. Naming the pattern is the corrective the show is offering.
Subject(s)
- College football's modern structural narrative
- NCAA / power-structure choices
Related
- 2026-05-05 2035 Vision for College Football — the forward-looking companion
- Annual Business Update — Matt Brown context