This is more of a recruiting topic suited for February, but some recent readings have steered my laptop in this direction. Plus recruiting is basically a year round Christmas Sale that's just merely celebrated a month and a half later. I realize the basis for the post is similar
to a post raised by
The Senator yesterday; he beat me to the punch. That's why he has his title...and why I'm just another dude with a blogspot.
Balancing your recruiting would seem a simple practice. You're allowed 85 scholarships and can sign up to 25 each year. But we all know how math works in Alabama. Recruiting beyond the rim likely originated in
Bear's tenure. Afterall, it was the Crimson Tide's swimming coach back in the 60s that ran out of money trying to buy enough life vests for the 270lb behemoths that lined the outside of the pool.
And since
Darling Nicky arrived in Tuscaloosa, the waters have only gotten murkier. Consequently, the blog
Oversigning.com has begun a campaign to either destroy the Bama tackle football program or end the practice of oversigning players. Maybe both. You'd enjoy it if you like numbers, stats and charts. You'll get especially giddy if you're a
wartiger dressed as a
HillBilly.
The news of Bama QB
Star Jackson's transfer last week mostly flew under the radar. And I'm sure Bama fans checked it off as a good recruit who couldn't hold his head above the 4 and 5 star waters that Saban has them bathing in. But the truth of the matter is that Saban has a long way to go.
Alabama had 66 players returning on scholarship when they signed 29 new recruits. 11 of those 29 enrolled early, putting the roster at 77, and leaving 18 more still coming in the Fall. 4 from the roster of 66 have already left (this includes Star Jackson), so that puts the roster at 73. 73 + 18 = 91. 91 is 6 more than 85.
If I'm wearing crimson at the wrong end of the locker room, I'm more than a little nervous. Of course, there's still plenty of time until Saban's own self-audit is due in August. There could be more transfers, medical hardships and general impropriety that lead to dismissals.
Julio...it's ok. Coach thinks you can still help us.
So, is what Saban (and to be fair, many other coaches across the land both near and far) doing legal? Yes, the trophy ain't gonna leave Bryant-Denny's armpit. Is it ethical? I guess that depends on who you ask.
"Star has made a tremendous amount of improvement and done a very, very good job. But I think sometimes when quarterbacks can't see the light at the end of the tunnel in terms of when they might be able to play, they get a little antsy and might want to go someplace else. Star and I have discussed it, and we're going to help him do what he feels is going to make him and his family the best decision for his future."
So Mr. Jackson is just a casualty of a competitive depth chart. A month ago (yeah, even now) many Dawg fans would've given their first born for the problem that Saban is
ankle crotch deep in. But a dose of reality usually provides some clarity.
How can Nick Saban say that he hates for any player to leave the program? He oversigns his classes by 10 players nearly every year which means that players are going to have to leave in order for Alabama to stay under the 85 player limit. Nick, if you hate to see players leave the program then quit signing more than you have room for every year and no one will have to leave unexpectedly, or at least not as many. This is poppy cock BS. The harsh reality of the situation is that no matter what, Saban has accepted 10 more LOI than he has room for and some how, some way, people have to leave or pay their own way or Alabama will be penalized by the NCAA for having too many players on scholarship.
The practice created a ripple when
Coach Giggity was the posterchild in 2009. What happens now that Nick Damn Saban is the clubhouse leader while operating so far in the red? His twenty-nine '10 signees is nowhere near Nutt's whopping thirty-seven (
37!!!) in '09. But we know this problem isn't a matter of the head pachyderm not being able to say
No!
Scholarship revocation (or reallocation...whatevs) isn't secluded to the gridiron of course. Dawg fans remember the name
Mike Anderson, the Missouri coach that told us
No Thanks. Well, he's recently come under a
fair share of scrutiny for two player transfers. The fumes from the bus out of town were just settling when two highly sought after JUCO players did some settling in Columbia as well. Anderson got
coincidental with the media. It seems the transfers coming in were better than the transfers going out. Go figure.
As despicable as the practice may be and as distasteful as many may find it, the fact remains that it is
hunky dorey with the NCAA.
"This happens a lot more than anybody even believes," said New Haven management professor Allen Sack, a former Notre Dame football player and vocal NCAA critic. "You're allowed to do it. According to the NCAA, there's nothing wrong with it.
"Coaches don't go out of their way to clarify (scholarship length). They make it as vague as they possibly can."
Durrell Chamarro would disagree about the
vagueness of his offer from former Colorado State coach
Sonny Lubick.
"I was told that as long as I maintained at least a 2.0 GPA and didn't break any rules, I would have my scholarship for four or five years," said Chamorro.
Yet after Chamarro's redshirt freshman year as a place kicker he had his scholarship revoked. Lubick's reasoning was simple: he wasn't good enough.And therein lies the fine gray line. A coach is hired to win and feels he must do any and everything to protect his program. Oversigning and revoking scholarships is a corner that's legal to cut.
At least it is legal for now. The US Justice Department's antitrust division is currently looking into the discrepancy of whether athletic scholarships are "one year merit based" rewards or promises of more that are broken all too often.
Am I glad Mark Richt doesn't dive into the waters that many of his SEC colleagues do...yes. Am I disgusted by kids being uprooted just because their value has dropped since they walked across their high school stage...certainly. But I also find it hard to blame the Sabans and Nutts when it's the NCAA that gives them the authority.