Captain Uberpants
Freshman
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2013
- Messages
- 4,335
I prefer my college football without free agency.
Highly unlikely this happens. Maybe a kid here and there but doesn't check out to me at any sort of scale. Most of the time kids who transfer are seeking playing time, which isn't easy at Alabama...unless you think they are going to stop signing the number one class every year. More likely benefits programs like West Virginia that are already heavily reliant upon the transfer market.
Alabama, Ohio State and Clemson are in the playoff pretty much every year currently. That's how college football works. There are always 8-10 teams with a realistic shot of making a run at the championship, and most of them are the same year in and year out.
I would actually argue the other way...this would break up the monopoly on talent these teams have a little bit. Right now, if you're a sophomore playing backup minutes at Alabama or Ohio State, you have a choice: ride it out and hope they don't recruit over the top of you next year OR transfer and sit out a year, which puts you one year further away from potentially turning pro and making money.
Or what if you're a pocket QB and your coach bails and gets replaced by a coach who wants a threat to run? Why should that kid have to sit out a year if he wants to go to a school with a coach that actually likes him?
Get rid of the one year penalty and you increase the flow of some of that high end talent to other programs.
No it would free up a player like Hurts because Alabama wouldn't really push too hard for a Wentz with Tua in play. It would ruin every non Power-5 team and every small Power 5 team. Kentucky had a great year, you bet that teams that are "football powerhouses" that have a void in a certain position will raid that team. What would occur is super teams.In your example, the “recruiting” of a “Wentz” would free up a “Tua” or any of the other 5*’s who have transferred from Alabama in the past. Fromm freed up a 5* and if Kirby hands the reigns to Fields it will free up another 5*. To me, that’s the way it should be.
Plus, those are bad examples because they were first round draft picks; their school choice didn’t negatively affect their draft stock/economic opportunity - which is reason enough for a late-blooming athlete who has blossomed to leave a G5, imo.
I'm trying to see it from your point of view, but I just can't. This would just cause super teams. Let's say Tua leaves he will leave to another top team like Auburn or Michigan, he wouldn't go JUCO or to a small school because these top teams would need QBs and he doesn't have to sit out a year. Then Patterson would have to leave as well and you're just causing a carousel is that what you want? If you think it is bad now wait till then.Your first paragraph: that wouldn’t work. If Alabama brought in a Wentz, or even a Mayfield it’s more than likely that a Tua would have left (something Tua mentioned he thought about last year) or Hurts or both ... or maybe for some crazy reason Wentz doesn’t start. Kentucky lost their top recruit to Miami and is probably the surprise of the SEC this year already having beaten UF and MSU. Your Kentucky example doesn’t hold because there are few people on Kentucky that Bama or Georgia or Clemson feel that they need. And, Miami’s recruiting coup has lead to few, if any, meaningful snaps.
Paragraph 2: so what. Shea Patterson was supposed to be the key for Michigan. So far ... meh. Few QB1 picks would try to learn a new system the year before they get drafted first round but even if they did ... it wouldn’t upset the “balance” of college football. There is no balance; it’s not a communist system - that’s left for the capitalists of the NFL. LOL.
For every kid that has to “sit” to learn how to block there is another 5* racking up the yards and that just becomes the whole in his draft profile (not too different from all the freshman P5 QBs starting elsewhere while Miami’s freshman QBs have to redshirt/apprentice.
You’re being hysterical by lamenting the impending death of high school recruiting; labeling it “useless”. Extreme. There will be some high profile changes from time to time, but for the most part football is going to look mostly like it did before the changes.
All your examples treat student-athletes like assets. They’re students. They should make their own choices whether they’re good or bad.
They should get rid of the dumbass rule and not make anyone sit out.
C'mon, Samson Doyo is Mormon...he's been on mission after mission....been missioning for ten years (at least) now. Mormons don't go to Hebrew School.At Hebrew School? Congrats!
Go Canes!
C'mon, Samson Doyo is Mormon...he's been on mission after mission....been missioning for ten years (at least) now. Mormons don't go to Hebrew School.