They got a top 10 class without the policy. Its sour grapes on Weis' part and it was kneejerk. Kids that grew up wanting to go to ND would sign early or on NSD anyway, kids that were undecided would wait anyway.
I dont see how it changes anything except making ND look desperate. The-recruit could still sign with somebody else at the last minute regardless, they could have blue and gold face paint on and still sign with someone else if they wanted to. Doesnt make them anything but idiots but they could.
as unpopular as your opinion might be around here, there's no real way to debate it because it's simply a matter of perception, and that's subject to interpretation.
that said, this whole issue brings to mind a spring game i attended in the early 90s while a senior in high school. i was there with my father, and we got caught up in a crowd of high school juniors and seniors all wearing letter jackets (i was wearing mine), so we followed them into the room. we proceeded to listen in on a speech from lou holtz, who was addressing the prospective recruits in attendance.
i remember specifically one thing he said, and i think it still rings true today. he told them that when they left campus that day, they would go back to their families and friends, and when they told them they were being recruited by UM, or OSU, or MSU, etc., their family and friends would say 'that's nice,' and leave it at that. he then told them to pay particular attention to the reaction they received from those same family and friends when they told them they were being recruited by Notre Dame. That was when they would be truly impressed.
Granted, Holtz was coming off a national championship and routinely beat the regional rivals like UM, Purdue, and MSU, so he was in a position to make that sort of claim. But i think it still remains true today, that when a recruit is being courted by the Irish, it makes a statement about both the character and the talent of that recruit. Recruits know this, and it's naive to think they don't occasionally use it to their advantage.
Now, it's exactly because of this that ND continues to be unique in the recruiting world - experiencing these sorts of difficulties that other schools don't encounter quite so frequently. It is also exactly why Weis is justified in taking a stance against those that might lead on the irish coaching staff for reasons other than being sincerely undecided.
Would Weis' new philosophy have prevented any of our defections this year? Certainly not for 2 of them. Perhaps Trattou would have thought twice had he received a phone call from the Irish staff explaining to him that if he's visiting florida over the weekend, his scholarship might not be waiting when he returns if another recruit waiting in the wings decides he's heard the call to ND and wants to commit.
but once again, that begs the question - if trattou had received a call like that and decided to take a visit anyway, isn't it clear that he's as good as gone anyway? what harm could there be in Weis taking a more proactive approach to finding his replacement when a recruit signals his intentions to decommit through his actions rather than his words?