palinurus
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I love when people use an anecdote to describe what the issue is. A lot of people say no JUCOs isn't a big deal, 4 year schollies isn't a big deal, academic standards isn't a big deal, etc. but when you give concrete examples it shows why ND doing things the "right way" hurts us versus teams that do things "by the book."
If ND was USC you would've seen Taylor McNamara recruited in this class and Jake Golic "done away with." You would've seen Luke Massa off the team as soon as it was evident he wouldn't be a contributor at QB and probably would've offered Jordan Westerkamp earlier and have him committed.
If we compromised academic standards to USC's level we would've had Carson Palmer many years ago instead of them... and more recently we wouldn't have passed on Byron Marshall who is now headed to Oregon.
And then when you watch Auburn bring in Nick Fairley and Cam Newton as JUCOs... and watch USC bring in a 5safety in this class as a JUCO as well as a bunch of JUCOs last year... and watch Michigan State every year build a team almost strictly from the JUCO ranks... you can't act like that doesn't hurt us. JUCOs allow you to get players after they've developed and not use a schollie on them while they're still in their growing phase OR fill holes on your roster like the NFL free agent wire.
Basically, add all these up and USC after sanctions is playing with about the same "barriers" to a good team as Notre Dame does every year.
Yes, this is all true and a good point, and one that the college football media completely ignores. The hard part is that we need to compete and win in the same environment as they do. I agree our grad rate and academics and concern for education and a job in the real world some day should all greatly influence a recruit's decision, and I think our kids, as a whole, are smarter, long-term focused, and more academically motivated. But we're in the same AP rankings with these other schools who, mostly, don't care about that stuff. It's a tough extra hurdle to overcome but, in the debates about who the top teams are, the academic stuff just doesn't give us traction. In debates with fans or other schools and among the media, t's like arguing which team would have the best four member panel on "Academic College Bowl."
safety in this class as a JUCO as well as a bunch of JUCOs last year... and watch Michigan State every year build a team almost strictly from the JUCO ranks... you can't act like that doesn't hurt us. JUCOs allow you to get players after they've developed and not use a schollie on them while they're still in their growing phase OR fill holes on your roster like the NFL free agent wire.