Bad Football Drives Fans Away Faster Than Bad Structure
Context
Show framing offered as the simpler explanation for fans walking away from programs. The structural-doom narrative blames NIL, portal, postseason expansion. The actual cause is much more boring: programs that produce 2-10 seasons, mediocre coaches who can't be fired, quarterback injuries, and absent ownership-class accountability lose their fans first.
The show's specific examples: Oklahoma State fans aren't disenchanted because of conference realignment; they're disenchanted because the program doesn't win games. Nebraska fans frustrated with Matt Rhule and Dylan Raiola pivot toward Anthony Colandrea-and-the-new-vibe because Colandrea is fun, not because anybody fixed structural concerns. The hypothetical illustration: if CJ Carr throws 14 interceptions in his first three games at Notre Dame and Marcus Freeman won't pull the trigger on a change, even Notre Dame's diehards stop watching.
The frame implies a useful diagnostic: when a fan complains about structural issues, often the underlying frustration is the more direct bad football problem. Fix the football, the structural complaints quiet down.
Subject(s)
- Fan-base loyalty mechanics
- The relationship between on-field performance and fan exodus