We’re still missing the point: Laramie isn’t a destination. No matter how much we want to believe otherwise, it’s just not.
Everyone’s talking about development, facilities, and NIL, but no one wants to acknowledge the obvious. You’re asking 18-22-year-old "athletes", many from urban or suburban areas, to spend years in one of the most isolated towns in the country.
It’s not just about sports. These kids want a lifestyle: things to do, people to meet, and culture. When you’re recruiting against places like San Diego, Fort Collins, or Boise, Wyoming is at a disadvantage before you even start the conversation.
You can have the best weight room and culture, but if kids can't picture themselves living there good luck. This isn’t the ‘90s anymore. Gen Z wants wins, exposure, and a social life. That’s not a knock on Wyoming; it’s the reality of the landscape.
Also, the Denver comparison is lazy as shit. The NBA is a closed, professional league with salary caps, luxury taxes, and revenue sharing to create parity. College football? No cap on what schools or boosters can throw at NIL. No draft to level the playing field. No real mechanisms to help the have-nots. Comparing Wyoming to a pro team with billion-dollar resources is a huge reach.
Expectations can’t be the same. College football has never been fair, and now it’s even less so.