I hate seeing the opt-outs. It makes it virtually impossible to imagine that one's team is full of players who are willing to give it all they've got until the last game is played.
Yeah, it sucks, and it's pervasive.
One of my most endearing memories from this new season of cognitive dissonance I'm having with this sport was the bowl at the end of the 2021 season. A disappointing team whose coach was fired and had limped to 6-6, was bowl eligible, and decided that having only 38 scholarship players wouldn't stop them. They actually had a couple less than that, I think, available for the game, but 38 was the number of scholly guys who didn't opt out for the draft or the don't-give-a-damns, or transfer out. That game was nearly canceled by the university for safety reasons, and probably should have been, but the kids really wanted to play.
Among them was Jontre Kirklin, a WR who was tapped to play QB for the game, because we had no QBs on the roster. He had played QB in high school, and, actually, played.....not terrible, for a WR. I'll never forget what he said after the game when asked if he thought about skipping it. "This is LSU. If we have 22, we're suiting up. It was the last game for a lot of us seniors, if there's a game to play we're going out there and fighting like Tigers."
They got their asses kicked by K-State in that game. But it was the most satisfying beating I can ever remember. I loved every player that played that day, especially Kirklin, and for one afternoon, I was proud to be an LSU fan and was genuinely rooting for all the kids who chose to represent their state and university, even when the big stage wasn't there, and even when the loss was assured.