Louisville Football has been no stranger to this blog, and here we are again. The cardinal football team has had nothing short of a bumpy ride this year that just continues to get bumpier. The cards are on track to be 2-10 after this season, leading fans, players, and students to express their outrage toward head coach Bobby Petrino.

Louisville’s misfortune this season has also caught the attention of many of their future recruits. Failure to fire Bobby Petrino and set a plan in motion to get the cards on the right track has led to multiple decommits by promising future players.
This definitely spells trouble for Louisville football, and shows that if athletic director Vince Tyra does not step in soon, Bobby Petrino will continue digging a monumental hole for the football program.
As of now, the University of Louisville has the smallest incoming 2019 class of recruits after receiving multiple notices of players recommitting. The 2019 class also now ranks 69th in the country, behind Miami of Ohio and just ahead of Maryland.
Something holding Louisville’s AD Vince Tyra from firing Petrino is the whopping $14 million buyout. That’s right… Bobby Petrino would have to be paid $14 million just to be fired.
The loss of some current Louisville players may spark even more conversation and push to get Petrino out. Fans have taken to twitter to joke about the team’s misfortune and express how upset they are.

On twitter, you can see Louisville decommit tweets left and right. But the number of transfers is also becoming worrisome. Of the first of them to announce a transfer was quarterback Jordan Travis. The most recent was another valuable and decorated player, Russ Yeast.

Louisville players are now not even looking to finish their current season before transferring, due to the reported terrible treatment from Bobby Petrino. News has also circulated of multiple players threatening Vince Tyra that if Bobby is not fired soon, they will transfer as well.
Louisville football has absolutely gone under this season, what happens next will likely have a large impact on the University and its athletic department.




