GojiraCane
All American
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2018
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Amidst all of the talk about Miami's performance this season, one factor lurking in the background is the overall size of the roster. Miami currently stands at 75 scholarship players, including the four walk-ons who received scholarships. This is five less than Richt's roster last year, and a full ten below a full scholarship load.
This is of course not factoring in injuries, redshirts, or the two players that have been ruled inadmissible this season.
Going further, since the conclusion of Year 2 of the Randy Shannon's tenure we have seen times of incredibly high attrition of the roster. Five out of seven classes (2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, and 2016) saw an average of 37% of the committed players not make it past their second year. Al Golden's first real class of 2012 saw an incredible 41% of players depart before their third year. Overall, we've signed 95 players (through NSD, transfers, or granting walkons scholarships) in the last four years, and against that we've seen 104 players depart to graduation or transfers.
The end result of this is a constant cycling in of freshmen talent. Players who should be redshirting have been playing early and potentially lack the strength and conditioning needed to go up against teams that are more skewed towards upperclassmen (such as Snyder's K-State rosters).
This is of course not factoring in injuries, redshirts, or the two players that have been ruled inadmissible this season.
Going further, since the conclusion of Year 2 of the Randy Shannon's tenure we have seen times of incredibly high attrition of the roster. Five out of seven classes (2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, and 2016) saw an average of 37% of the committed players not make it past their second year. Al Golden's first real class of 2012 saw an incredible 41% of players depart before their third year. Overall, we've signed 95 players (through NSD, transfers, or granting walkons scholarships) in the last four years, and against that we've seen 104 players depart to graduation or transfers.
The end result of this is a constant cycling in of freshmen talent. Players who should be redshirting have been playing early and potentially lack the strength and conditioning needed to go up against teams that are more skewed towards upperclassmen (such as Snyder's K-State rosters).