Oh, I could say so many things ...
son of rook said:
I don't see a possible 5th yr from next years senior class that had the same upside as our present level of recruits we are now getting.
Perhaps so, perhaps not. But first off, it's not about 'upside', it's about winning NOW. Secondly, Lambert was 4* Scout/3* Rivals and Crum 3*/3* coming out of highschool, so it's not exactly like they were chopped liver. (And Vernaglia was 4*/4* -- woohoo!)
son of rook said:
Top team start the most talented people not 5th yr seniors who if they were any good would have left their junior year.
Unless, they, um, wanted to finish their degrees. Which, um, happens sometimes.
son of rook said:
Top team get rid of their senior and start juniors, soph and frosh.
What do you mean 'get rid of'? You can't pull a kid off scholarship, so unless he goes pro (which we've covered already) or becomes academically ineligible (which doesn't happen at ND), he CAN'T be 'gotten rid of' in less than four years.
In sum: at ND, unlike certain other institutions in, say, Ann Arbor, Columbus, Gainesville, and the LA ghetto, decisions like this are made on grounds that include PEOPLE and ACADEMICS, and not just winning. Our athletes aren't (generally) like theirs, our academic standards aren't (at all) like theirs (wait - do they have ANY academic standards?), and as a result our redshirt and fifth-year senior policies are going to differ from theirs. If you want a football factory, root for the Spoiled Children. Notre Dame, meanwhile, will continue to do things the Notre Dame way.
[/scolding]
Whew. Let me make two other points, though, one on each side:
First, from what I understand, ND traditionally has NOT granted scholarships to fifth-year seniors; it's only in the past few years that it's become common. The reason for the old policy was that everyone is required to take enough courses to graduate within four years, and they didn't want kids just hanging around doing nothing. In altering their red-shirt policy, they've required fifth-year seniors to enroll in some sort of degree program, but the standards there probably haven't been as high as they usually are. I'm certainly not opposed to this change, but I do think that a good argument could be made that being too free with redshirts and scholarships for fifth-year players could compromise our academic integrity -- so if someone wants to base an argument for restricting them on THESE grounds, I'd be willing to listen.
Secondly, we should also note that the recent turn in this discussion misses entirely the point that IUB and I were batting back and forth at the start: namely, the issue of only having 85 TOTAL scholarships to give, which comes to just over 21 a year even with only one fifth-year senior (or walk-on - and don't we always have one of those?) on board. Obviously, as IUB pointed out, we may be willing to exceed that number this year, but at some point we're going to have to get ourselves consistently within the 19-21 range, and every year we go over that hurts our ability to get under it in the future. Again, I don't think this issue is at all conclusive, but it's definitely worth bearing it in mind.