The funny thing is you don't realize how much you contradict your own point by focusing on 5 schools. The #1 NIL spending team this year was Texas A&M. They didn't even make a bowl game. #3 was Oklahoma.Last post on this.
Yes, NIL has cemented the top schools as the top schools. The turnover we are used to in college football, where different schools comprise top 5 programs and then recede, won't happen anymore if NIL continues as structured and continues to escalate. There's no reason that it should. Recruiting used to have ebbs and flows, but doesn't and won't. It's like the banking system now, but without the risk. Too big to fail.
whuh whuh huh..??!? If you think any of those schools were national championship caliber 10 years ago, you just don't follow college football.There was a massive shift in funding in the past three decades that essentially sidelined many schools from every being able to recruit to national contender level: West Virginia, BYU, Virginia Tech, many Big 10, Big 12, and PAC 10 schools that were potential top 5 teams just can't ever get there again, or if they do, it is a massive outlier.
You are literally going back 30 years, finding every team that was ever ranked #1 for one single week, and calling them a national champion contender.Regarding the ACC, five teams have been ranked in the top 4 or in a bowl game with national championship potential in the past 20 years. None of them is recruiting into the top 5 any more. Even Virginia was #1 for a week in the early 90's. If Clemson has a disaster of a year and loses the ACC championship, the ACC winner won't be in the final four.
If we can magically grab every AP poll from now to 2053, we would see just as many teams. The ebb and flow will continue, you just can't see it yet. You will have dominant teams and you will have outliers.