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When ‘guarantee games’ backfire: Flipping the script in college football

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When ‘guarantee games' backfire: Flipping the script in college football

In college football, they are called guarantee . One university pays another an exorbitant flat fee to play a football on the road with no return game.

Normally, the home team draws a crowd large enough to easily the one-time fee. In theory, the home team also buys an easy victory to pad its record and it qualify for a bowl game. 

It does not always work out this way, as we shall see.

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These games are most common in September before the major conference teams enter their league schedules. 

Rick Cleveland

Southern Miss played a guarantee game Saturday at Miami. Miami paid Southern Miss $1.5 million to play at Hard Rock Stadium. After trailing for much of the first half, the Hurricanes dominated the second half with superior depth and won 30 to 7. That's how these things usually work. After expenses, Southern Miss cleared $1.375 million. Miami got its victory.

Again, these games are most common this time of the season. bought a victory from Central Arkansas. LSU bought one from Southern University. Ohio bought one from Arkansas State. Georgia paid Samford well for its 33-0 drubbing. We could go on and on.

But…

This is rich:

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  • A&M paid Appalachian State $1.5 million to play at College Station. App State flew out of town with the massive check – and a 17-14 victory.
  • Notre Dame forked over $1.25 million to Marshall to play at South Bend. You know what happened. The Thundering Herd took the money and also won the game, 26-21.
  • Nebraska, which we once referred to as mighty Nebraska, paid Georgia Southern slightly more than $1.4 million to play at Lincoln. Georgia Southern took the money and ran – and passed – to a 45-42 victory that was the last straw for Nebraska coach Scott Frost, who was fired afterward.

who aren't familiar with college football and its finances might be surprised to learn the exorbitant amounts paid for these guarantee games. In big-time college athletics, it does seem universities from the power conferences play with Monopoly money.

Let's take it one step further. Nebraska will have to pay Frost $15 million to buy out the remainder of his contract. That's a lot of zeroes. If Nebraska had waited until Oct. 1 – not quite three more weeks – the buyout would have dropped to $7.5 million.

I did the math. In effect, Nebraska is paying $375,000 per day to fire Scott Frost 20 days before his buyout would have been reduced by half. Like I said, it's like Monopoly money.

Yes, Scott Frost had to make a lot of mistakes to win only 16 of 47 games in his four-plus seasons at his alma mater. But somebody else had to make a much bigger mistake to hire a guy that you are now paying $15 million not to coach. And now you've got to pay somebody several more million to be your coach.

Let's take it another step. Clay Helton, the new Georgia Southern coach, still is being paid not to coach Southern Cal. That's right, USC fired Helton last September after a lopsided loss to Stanford. Southern Cal owed Helton $10 million over the final two years of his contract.

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So a coach Southern Cal pays $10 million not to coach led Georgia Southern to a victory that caused Nebraska to pay $15 million to another guy not to coach. That's $25 million those two football powers are paying people not to coach.

Meanwhile, Georgia Southern – a Sun Belt Conference team just like Marshall and App State – pays Helton $800,000 to coach. Georgia Southern appears to be getting a lot more for its money that Southern Cal did. Yet, he's the same guy, the same coach.

The moral of this story? 

Not sure there is one other than this: When scheduling these high-dollar guarantee games, athletic directors might want to look at teams outside the Sun Belt.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi News

Stabbing investigation leads to officer-involved shooting in Gulfport

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www.wjtv.com – Kaitlin Howell – 2024-05-05 09:30:31

SUMMARY: An officer-involved shooting occurred in , Mississippi a call about a stabbing on Reed Avenue on May 4. According to Bailey Martin of the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, an altercation between an officer and the led to the shooting. The suspect was taken to a local hospital for treatment, while the officer was unharmed. The Mississippi of Investigation is looking into the incident and will their findings to the Mississippi 's Office.

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Mississippi News

1 injured in officer-involved shooting at Ridgeland apartment complex

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www.wjtv.com – Kaitlin Howell – 2024-05-05 08:55:41

SUMMARY: Authorities are investigating an officer-involved shooting at a Ridgeland apartment complex that left one person . The incident occurred at Ridgeland Place Apartments and involved a firing shots at before being injured and taken to the hospital. The officers were responding to a call for service, and no serious injuries were reported among them. The Mississippi of Investigation is looking into the incident and will share their findings with the 's Office.

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Mississippi News

WPPD needs help locating ATV purchased with fraudulent means

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www.wcbi.com – Grace Brister – 2024-05-04 21:44:44

SUMMARY: The Point Department is seeking from the community to locate a black 2024 Can-Am ATV that was purchased fraudulently from Adventure ATV. The whereabouts of this ATV are unknown, and anyone with information is urged to contact the West Point Police Department at (662)494-1244. The individuals in the photos provided are not considered suspects in the investigation. For more and updates, follow the West Point Police Department on Facebook.

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