johnnycando
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One starting point to give us a far wider pool to recruit into would be to drop the second language requirement. That "skill" wasn't even required pragmatically for my PhD studies let alone for undergraduate success in life. There are probably hundreds of good athletes per year who don't get in the HS classrooms for a second language or can't/won't pass with a decent grade.
I wouldn't be surprised if this alone shrinks the recruiting pool (especially for athletes from low income school districts or even high-obsession football districts) by very large percentages. And no one wants to say this, but a lot of the speed/power recruits everywhere around the country's power football programs come from these exact "school" districts. ... and, yes, there's a racial statistic to this.
ND succeeded despite the higher standards in the old days because so many pipelines existed to feed elite players to our program. Football got bigger wealthier and more of a midnight business chasing elite jocks whether they could read or not. I recall the moment that hit for me: Bear Bryant recruits a big talent back named Wilver something-or-other, and was beginning to break the Alabama "no coloreds" policy --- even Alabama fans didn't initially agree with their beloved Bear Icon on that. But the back ran wild and they decided that it was a good thing after all.
Bryant made the mistake of allowing the media to interview this fellow after a game. He could barely make sentences. His main statement was (and this is spelled to indicate the sound of the words used): "Coat Brynt say --- I get ball, I gone." Bryant cut that interview short, mercifully.
That type of non-educated athlete can run by you or through you but he can't come within light years of getting into Notre Dame. He still CAN get into a LOT of power schools though. He can be recruited --- Coach Kelly can't even bother. Look at the top recruits in the nation every year when it's still early in recruiting. Lots of them don't even have a Notre Dame offer --- we can't even try. Even a really good guy like the current USC RB (Stepp) can get into USC but not here.
The Old Days: ND was such a fantasy in football that parents had ND and almost nothing but ND in mind as their rare athletic+intelligent kid went to high school, that the steps towards ND were almost a given if the kid was mentally and athletically good enough.
Well composed OMM.
God bless you sir and thank you.