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August 17, 2007
Is early signing period in works?
NCAA concerned about increasing practice of players changing their minds
By Jeff Rabjohns
Remember the dizzying recruitment of Warren Central High School football star Jerimy Finch?
He made an oral commitment to Michigan, then to Indiana and ultimately signed with Florida in February in a scenario that occasionally plays out with touted prep football stars.
The chairman of the NCAA Division I Football Issues Committee wants the practice to stop, and thinks an early signing date will help. As it stands, football has one signing date, months after the high school season.
"There's a consensus that an early signing period would be beneficial, but we have not been able to come up with a consensus when that signing period should be," Nebraska athletic director Steve Pederson said Thursday in a wide-ranging teleconference regarding the state of college football.
The football signing period for current seniors is Feb. 6-April 1. All sports other than football, field hockey, soccer and men's water polo have an early signing period in November.
Highly sought basketball recruits can sign before their senior season begins. Football players don't have that option.
Even when football players commit, college coaches spend months "baby-sitting" -- continuing to recruit committed players -- to keep from losing them.
"They're almost in a position of trying to hold everything together for six months," Pederson said. "If a student-athlete and his parents have made a decision, they should be able to sign in a reasonable amount of time."
Pederson said he has heard support for various early signing periods, from the spring after a prospect's junior year, to the summer to December of the senior year.
Another year to play?
Pederson said he also sees growing support for players to have a fifth year of eligibility.
He said more athletes are earning bachelor's degrees in 31/2 or four years and enrolling in graduate school. He also said a fifth year of eligibility would give teams more experienced players, which would lead to more player rotations at some positions and potentially reduce injuries.
"We believe the time has come," said Pederson, a strong proponent of the idea.
No playoff push
Pederson didn't sound ready to push for a playoff system to replace the bowls, even though I-A -- now know as the Football Bowl Subdivision -- is the only level of college football without a playoff.
NCAA Division I-AA -- or Football Championship Subdivision -- Division II, Division III and NAIA all have playoffs that require multiple postseason wins to crown a champion.
"If you took the bowl games and said, OK, 60 teams are on the way to bowl games, and two of those are going to play off for the real national championship, there are 10 or 15 teams that haven't been to a bowl game in years. There is great enthusiasm, great momentum around those programs. There are another 10 or 15 that win a bowl game and create enthusiasm off a game maybe they didn't expect to win," he said.
August 17, 2007
Is early signing period in works?
NCAA concerned about increasing practice of players changing their minds
By Jeff Rabjohns
Remember the dizzying recruitment of Warren Central High School football star Jerimy Finch?
He made an oral commitment to Michigan, then to Indiana and ultimately signed with Florida in February in a scenario that occasionally plays out with touted prep football stars.
The chairman of the NCAA Division I Football Issues Committee wants the practice to stop, and thinks an early signing date will help. As it stands, football has one signing date, months after the high school season.
"There's a consensus that an early signing period would be beneficial, but we have not been able to come up with a consensus when that signing period should be," Nebraska athletic director Steve Pederson said Thursday in a wide-ranging teleconference regarding the state of college football.
The football signing period for current seniors is Feb. 6-April 1. All sports other than football, field hockey, soccer and men's water polo have an early signing period in November.
Highly sought basketball recruits can sign before their senior season begins. Football players don't have that option.
Even when football players commit, college coaches spend months "baby-sitting" -- continuing to recruit committed players -- to keep from losing them.
"They're almost in a position of trying to hold everything together for six months," Pederson said. "If a student-athlete and his parents have made a decision, they should be able to sign in a reasonable amount of time."
Pederson said he has heard support for various early signing periods, from the spring after a prospect's junior year, to the summer to December of the senior year.
Another year to play?
Pederson said he also sees growing support for players to have a fifth year of eligibility.
He said more athletes are earning bachelor's degrees in 31/2 or four years and enrolling in graduate school. He also said a fifth year of eligibility would give teams more experienced players, which would lead to more player rotations at some positions and potentially reduce injuries.
"We believe the time has come," said Pederson, a strong proponent of the idea.
No playoff push
Pederson didn't sound ready to push for a playoff system to replace the bowls, even though I-A -- now know as the Football Bowl Subdivision -- is the only level of college football without a playoff.
NCAA Division I-AA -- or Football Championship Subdivision -- Division II, Division III and NAIA all have playoffs that require multiple postseason wins to crown a champion.
"If you took the bowl games and said, OK, 60 teams are on the way to bowl games, and two of those are going to play off for the real national championship, there are 10 or 15 teams that haven't been to a bowl game in years. There is great enthusiasm, great momentum around those programs. There are another 10 or 15 that win a bowl game and create enthusiasm off a game maybe they didn't expect to win," he said.