S
SteveM
Guest
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SCD,
Points noted:
Again, I argue that 20 scholarship students wrestling for real is better than 20 practicing football. Collecting a scholarship and coasting as a practice player is a rational choice for a kid. I just think better things can be done with the scholarship. Everyone has danced around this argument. Can someone here address it directly?
Forced to a school of not of the player's choosing? Well yeah, no one said life was fair. Ask the players 86+ talent wise who wanted to go to ND but didn't get an offer or the HS wrestler who has few programs to enroll in at all. Most people go to a school which is not their "ideal" for a variety of reasons. E.g., a kid at Cornell may be bummed that he didn't get into Harvard. So what?
I'm not sure, but it's my impression that the lower divisions do not offer athletic scholarships.
The 2,400 is absolutely the MAX loss. Why would other non-D-1A squad counts change?
SteveM
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couple more thoughts
1) I disagree that the parents/athletes are not aware of the likelihood of sitting the bench for x-years, or entirely. That is, objectively there is more than enough information easily deducible that most players will not play. when you start to funnel down the number of players who play in HS, vs the number of players in D-1 football, vs the number of players who play in the pros (NFL), anyone looking at it objectively should realize the odds of playing are against them each level they rise. Whether or not players/parents do look at it objectively is obviously a different discussion.
2) Something i think you're missing (that is important to me personally) is this forces football players to chose playing over education.
What if I'm a kid who knows he's not likely going pro, but is good enough to get a scholarship to a D-1 school. I'm content to being a #2, 3 or prep squad, taking the field saturday, and getting a free education at one of the best universities in the US; the school of my choosing. I'm using my physical abilities to advance my educational opportunities, knowing my physical abilities probably end at that level.
If I'm one of those 66-85 players, now I lose that opportunity even though I was content with being a #2 or #3 string player for my college career. But because someone else wants me to have playing time, I am forced to a school not of my own choosing, a non-BCS school, Div 2, 3 or NAIA. That's not to say that a kid can't get a good education at a non-BCS school, or Div 2, 3, or NAIA school. But now kids like my example are not allowed to choose their school/education, and instead are forced to accept a different edcational opportunity than they want. I prefer less institutional compulsion.
I recognize a kid could still choose to walk-on at his school of choice, but that's beside the point. Why take away his opportunity for a free education at his school of choice if playing time is not an issue for him, and force him to take on the added financial burden?
3) This isn't just about the 2400 D-1 scholarship football players either. This will also have a ripple effect down through Div2, 3, and NAIA. This is also tied to my 2nd point. By forcing the 2400 players to essentially go down, Div2 players will be forced down, and Div3 and NAIA players may be forced out all together.
Now you not only take away choice for Div1 players, you may effectively keep some Div-2, 3 and NAIA players from getting a free education at all.
Most kids who go to Div2, 3 and NAIA programs on scholarship probably know they aren't going to play professionally. They're using their physical ability to advance their educational opportunity, which would be taken away by this proposal.
this is a good point and i don't know that there could be enough controls here to prevent widespread abuse. IMO, cutting the number of avail scholarships will only increase the abuse, lying, scheming and mistreatment of 18-21 year old male atheletes by D-1 football coaches who have extrordinarily high expectations on them already.
SCD,
Points noted:
Again, I argue that 20 scholarship students wrestling for real is better than 20 practicing football. Collecting a scholarship and coasting as a practice player is a rational choice for a kid. I just think better things can be done with the scholarship. Everyone has danced around this argument. Can someone here address it directly?
Forced to a school of not of the player's choosing? Well yeah, no one said life was fair. Ask the players 86+ talent wise who wanted to go to ND but didn't get an offer or the HS wrestler who has few programs to enroll in at all. Most people go to a school which is not their "ideal" for a variety of reasons. E.g., a kid at Cornell may be bummed that he didn't get into Harvard. So what?
I'm not sure, but it's my impression that the lower divisions do not offer athletic scholarships.
The 2,400 is absolutely the MAX loss. Why would other non-D-1A squad counts change?
SteveM
