Scholarship offers by P5 School

Calinative

All-ACC
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Apr 28, 2014
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We always talk about how we need to get to the point where our offers mean something again. And we can't just be sending out meaningless offers to everyone. Well, it looks like we've done a pretty good job righting the ship in that sense. We've offered 145 scholarships, which ranks 49th. Other Notable Schools:
1. Iowa St - 388
2. Louisville - 340 .....didn't expect that from Louisville.
10. UGA - 272
16. UF - 237 ..... I definitely expected this out of UF
22. Michigan & Bama - 215 ...... Actually kinda surprising that Bama has so many offers out
45. Notre Dame -160
49. tOSU and Miami - 145 ..... We're sitting right around the magic number where most of the top CFB schools are.
51. FSU - 140
53. USC - 132
61. Clemson - 90
65. Stanford - 32 .... This is just ******* insane. David Shaw wasn't lying when he said there may be one person in all the SEC states that could get into Stanford, lol. Only 32 offers out is ******* crazy.
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Big difference between COMMITABLE offers and the rest. Schools throw out offers to guys that are elite, but aren't interested, just because they want to get their name in the mix, or at the least, be spared from the "You didn't offer so and so, why" nonsense. Some guys receive offers, but if someone at their position, that is better commits before them, that offer is then invalid.

I'm willing to bet that Richt isn't sitting around crying about whether so and so have more offers out than him, or that he has too many. He's trying to build the best possible class. If that means you get on the boat before others, and offer, then so be it. Remember, guys like Jimmy Johnson would offer guys that no one else was hot on, because he trusted his instincts. As long as you get the best 25 you can, then I don't give a **** how many offers you throw out to get there.
 
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We hear the phrase "commitable offer". What is the actual difference between the two and how does a school extend a non-commitable offer. Are there legal ramifications for either or NCAA rules governing either?
 
We hear the phrase "commitable offer". What is the actual difference between the two and how does a school extend a non-commitable offer. Are there legal ramifications for either or NCAA rules governing either?

One is a take, the other is a TAKE

@Bran
 
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