That take completely misses the reality of modern college football coverage. The spring game list is about controlled scrimmages for evaluation, not a referendum on rivalry importance. The Magic City Classic consistently draws over 60,000 fans, which is a massive number that speaks for itself. Alabama and Florida get more national TV slots because of their conference contracts and broader audience reach, that's just the business side. But to say the Classic doesn't mean something real is disrespectful to the entire HBCU tradition. The intensity in that stadium, the band battle, the community impact, that's all real. Our rivalry with Hobart has a 64% win rate in the last decade, and the Cortaca Jug game sells out every year, proving local rivalries thrive outside the spotlight. TV ratings drive network decisions, but they don't measure a game's soul. The SWAC has its own media deals and celebration, and their rivalries are healthier than ever. Just because ESPN isn't broadcasting a spring practice doesn't diminish a century of history.