Buckeyes Fans Wont Like Where This Rivalry Money Idea Could Lead

Could Josh Pate's bold vision for the future of college football reshape the sport's financial and cultural landscape?

Josh Pate is floating an idea that could end up helping a lot of Ohio State’s rivals, and it starts with a simple pitch: use private equity to offset the money grabs that keep pulling college football games off campus.

Pate made the case while joining his business partners on Bussin’ with the Boys, where Will Compton asked him to lay out three reasons he should be college football’s commissioner. The private equity idea was the first one he offered, and it was the one that stood out immediately.

The basic problem, as Pate sees it, is the growing number of games that get moved away from campus because the payday is too good to pass up. In his view, that’s where private equity could come in and help compensate for those losses.

That’s the kind of suggestion that will make plenty of fans uneasy on first listen. Private equity has become a loaded term in modern business, and for good reason. It’s often associated with stripping things down to the most efficient version possible, cutting whatever doesn’t fit the bottom line.

But Pate’s argument is that college football is already dealing with a financial reality that keeps pushing the sport in that direction anyway.

And if there’s one thing that still defines the sport at its best, it’s an on-campus game. That’s the purest version of college football. Neutral-site games, by contrast, are a tougher sell unless you’re looking at the check that comes with them.

Pate’s example points straight to the matchup between Georgia Tech and Georgia. He framed it as the kind of game that gets moved because the money is too tempting, even though the setting loses something important in the process.

He compared it to Ohio State moving the Michigan game to the Cleveland Browns stadium just to cash a bigger check.

That alone is enough to make most fans cringe.

Rivalry games belong on campus. That’s the part of college football that still feels right. But in today’s landscape, the dollar sign can be hard to ignore, and Pate’s idea is built around trying to solve that problem before it keeps spreading.

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