JoeyGetherall
"No one ever drowned in sweat" - Lou
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Not that I am complaining (well maybe I am a little) but I have just never received a legit answer to that question. I am assuming it involves admission requirements?
They have to have the realistic ability to graduate in 4 years and most JUCO players are in JUCO because they didn't take academics seriously to begin with.
Is that the real reason?
While I understand that's the perception, and in a lot of cases perception = reality, there are exceptions. Kids that just haven't fully developed physically (or academically). Aaron Rogers always comes to mind. He's obviously no dummy. If you can go to school at Cal you can go to school at ND.
Aaron Rodgers is a great example of an exception. But he's one in a hundred (literally). And ND can and does take JUCOs... it's just incredibly rare. You see prep school/JUCO player far more commonly in other sports at ND because they are the kinds of kids without issues as compared to football players.
The vast majority of highly rated football players at the JUCO level are there because they didn't qualify the first time around OR got kicked out of their first DI school.
We did not lose the nationally championship because we didn't have any JUCO transfers on the team if that is where anybody is going.
Is that the real reason?
While I understand that's the perception, and in a lot of cases perception = reality, there are exceptions. Kids that just haven't fully developed physically (or academically). Aaron Rogers always comes to mind. He's obviously no dummy. If you can go to school at Cal you can go to school at ND.
Cal does not hold their players to the same standards we do and they have a terrible graduation rate.
I see. I was always under the impression that for some reason they weren't allowed to take them. Some sort of quirk like no redshirting.
I always thought JUCOs would be such a big help especially when filling out interior lineman. It's probably hard to find kids like that want to go to a school like ND and recruiting efforts are better spent on HS kids.
JUCOs are insanely valuable. For starters, you can recruit talented non-qualifiers... and when they don't qualify you stick them in your JUCO farm system and can revisit them as needed. This allows you to get around roster limits and ensure no "holes" on your team. Teams like Alabama literally have NFL caliber players at every position not because they don't recruit busts but because when they recruit a bust or two or lose a player for whatever reason they can go get a very good ready-to-play guy to fill his spot.
Secondly, they're incredibly useful for OL, DL, CB, S where late bloomers pop up on the regular. OL is arguably the single hardest position to project players at coming out of HS (CB is a close second IMO) and at the JUCO level you can look at a kid and say "he's 300 lbs and dominates high level competition" and sign him up with far less margin for error.
Want to know how Kansas State somehow is decent at football? They take almost half their kids from the JUCO ranks.