You guys sound like the oldest, whiniest, most miserable people. Kids post on social media. You lames are the one actually reading the things they write to their high school friends. They're in high school. High school kids love everything they're involved with until they don't. In college every year I joked that when you see a freshman girl with more than one other girl she's walking with at least one of her future sworn enemies as every girl freshman girl crew splintered within a year. You're essentially mad at high school kids for being high school kids and the ONLY reason you're paying any attention to them is because they were saying they wanted to go to your favorite school. Get over it and stop demonizing kids because YOU don't like their decisions. If you've got beef with kids talking on Twitter then simply ignore all of it. You don't have to follow them, you don't have to read threads about their every phone call and visit, and you don't have to get caught up in the recruiting process. Instead you choose to hop on the train while complaining about it like babies
These should have no concern about changing their mind, schools slow recruit and change direction on kids all the time. Not to mention a letter in of intent obligates a kid to a school for 4 years; a school to a kid 1 year.
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Since you had a son who recently played, I'm curious what your thought is on the scholarship and transfer rules. How would you change the rules?
Should be the same as the coaches (no rules). Barring that if you are not on scholarship you should be able to go wherever they are willing to except you.
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What about if you are on the team and already on scholarship?
Scholarships are renewed annually. Players should be able to transfer annually. Asst Coaches are usually on 1-year contracts; they are able to take "better" opportunities at that point. Head coaches are able to come and go pretty much whenever they want same for AD's and the school President. Trainers and the entire supporting staff are able to come and go. The student body can transfer, fans can end and start school allegiances when they want, why shouldn't players?
The excuse given is that there would be chaos; probable would be.....from the coaches and schools. It is inherently unfair...un-American to deny liberties to a group of people while allowing those liberties to the group who would cause the problems folks are concerned about.
What would actually happen IMO? Only folks actually harmed would be players who lose scholarships at the lowest level of college football (they could play D3 but no scholarship). The elite teams would lose depth. Players not playing but capable of playing somewhere else would do so (think Russell Wilson). Balancing classes is an art form (ask Tim Brewster) schools would not be marshaling in transfers every year, some may not do it at all (think Juco transfers).
Most players not playing would be content providing depth....and remaining on scholarship (scholarships the schools are holding for that years recruitment class). Players aren't stupid or willing to take the risk of transferring to another school.
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Scholarships are renewed annually. Players should be able to transfer annually. Asst Coaches are usually on 1-year contracts; they are able to take "better" opportunities at that point. Head coaches are able to come and go pretty much whenever they want same for AD's and the school President. Trainers and the entire supporting staff are able to come and go. The student body can transfer, fans can end and start school allegiances when they want, why shouldn't players?
The excuse given is that there would be chaos; probable would be.....from the coaches and schools. It is inherently unfair...un-American to deny liberties to a group of people while allowing those liberties to the group who would cause the problems folks are concerned about.
What would actually happen IMO? Only folks actually harmed would be players who lose scholarships at the lowest level of college football (they could play D3 but no scholarship). The elite teams would lose depth. Players not playing but capable of playing somewhere else would do so (think Russell Wilson). Balancing classes is an art form (ask Tim Brewster) schools would not be marshaling in transfers every year, some may not do it at all (think Juco transfers).
Most players not playing would be content providing depth....and remaining on scholarship (scholarships the schools are holding for that years recruitment class). Players aren't stupid or willing to take the risk of transferring to another school.
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I actually agree with this. The schools should make scholarships 4 year guarantees (with huge exceptions for failing out and criminal activity). Either that, or the school should be able to offer as many years guaranteed as they want and the kid can do what he wants when that scholarship is up.
It would create chaos in college football but it would actually be fair.
I believe their are some schools that do this. Auburn being one of them
I believe their are some schools that do this. Auburn being one of them
IMO this policy protects players from themselves as much as it protects the schools. These kids already come in with hyper inflated ego's if you add to that the ability to jump ship at the first sign of adversity with no consequences and you can turn a situation where a kid gets benched by a coach as a teaching moment into the start of a revolving door where the kid chases after a spot on a team where a coach takes him as is rather than growing up.
So now its the job of football programs to implement their idea of honor and 'growing up' by 'protecting' kids from making poor choices? Why then shouldn't that be implemented for the entire student body? Why can the random English major transfer when he gets homesick or has a miserable year or decides he wants something different but the football player can't? That policy doesn't protect players from anything, it protects schools and coaches by preventing their labor force from having freedom of movement when that labor force isn't happy with what they're getting in return. The coach can take the kid that said he ONLY wanted to play RB and move him to DB knowing that the kids only choices are to accept it or transfer knowing he won't be able to play for at least a year.
Scholarships are renewed annually. Players should be able to transfer annually. Asst Coaches are usually on 1-year contracts; they are able to take "better" opportunities at that point. Head coaches are able to come and go pretty much whenever they want same for AD's and the school President. Trainers and the entire supporting staff are able to come and go. The student body can transfer, fans can end and start school allegiances when they want, why shouldn't players?
The excuse given is that there would be chaos; probable would be.....from the coaches and schools. It is inherently unfair...un-American to deny liberties to a group of people while allowing those liberties to the group who would cause the problems folks are concerned about.
What would actually happen IMO? Only folks actually harmed would be players who lose scholarships at the lowest level of college football (they could play D3 but no scholarship). The elite teams would lose depth. Players not playing but capable of playing somewhere else would do so (think Russell Wilson). Balancing classes is an art form (ask Tim Brewster) schools would not be marshaling in transfers every year, some may not do it at all (think Juco transfers).
Most players not playing would be content providing depth....and remaining on scholarship (scholarships the schools are holding for that years recruitment class). Players aren't stupid or willing to take the risk of transferring to another school.
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IMO this policy protects players from themselves as much as it protects the schools. These kids already come in with hyper inflated ego's if you add to that the ability to jump ship at the first sign of adversity with no consequences and you can turn a situation where a kid gets benched by a coach as a teaching moment into the start of a revolving door where the kid chases after a spot on a team where a coach takes him as is rather than growing up.
Question about early signing periods (have to go with basketball because they have early signing). If a player signs during that period and a coach gets fired and said player wants to leave, do they need to handle like a transfer? Get released from their scholarship and then pick a school or can they just say want out and away they go?
With all due respect to 24, I think having all College FB players function as de facto free agents would be a mess.
If players were free to transfer with no restrictions, it would next to impossible for coaches to manage rosters and plan for next year. Coach A could think he's set at DB, and then 2 starters decide to transfer, and they're scrambling to fill holes.
How about this - a one-time only opt-out clause: players who want to transfer could do so once during their varsity career. that would give players some flexibility without causing too much havoc on the game.
For the reasons I stated, I don't believe there would be that many additional transfers. There just would not be that many schools wanting to bring players in for less than 2 seasons and players would more than 2 seasons would most likely not be proven players.
For the reasons I stated, I don't believe there would be that many additional transfers. There just would not be that many schools wanting to bring players in for less than 2 seasons and players would more than 2 seasons would most likely not be proven players.
Wait! What? How the hell does one know if he doesn't agree with one's post unless he reads the damned thing.
That English major more than likely is paying for his education.
That English major is paying far less than the football player.
The U spent less than 7 million on its football team. The football team brought in 15-25 million.
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That English major more than likely is paying for his education.
Incorrect.
Your second statement, if true, might indicate that the football player may deserve some additional compensation (if the market dictated it - but as of now it doesn't...we just want to watch football, and the players are ultimately replaceable and irrelevant. Harsh, but true) - but it really has nothing to do with the out-and-out falsehood of your first statement. The football player is paying less than the academic student.