As the article notes, this rule already exists for college basketball:
Quote:It would mirror a rule already in place for NCAA basketball.
The rule exists to keep teams from paying for recruits and disguising the payment as a job.
It sounds like the explosion of non-coaching staff positions at the wealthiest football programs, like Alabama and Ohio State, has caused people at other programs to suspect that jobs are being handed out as inducements for delivering a player.
Remember that Chip Kelly got into trouble at Oregon (and got a show-cause penalty) for paying a "street agent", giving the guy money allegedly for recruiting reports but really for delivering a recruit to Oregon. Under the current football rules, there was a perfectly legal loophole that Kelly could have used instead: He could have given the street agent a no-work job on the Oregon staff with some official-sounding title.
If they change this rule for football to make it consistent with the basketball rule, that loophole will be closed, which is a good thing.
That said if you watched the 30 on 30 'One and not Done' last night you could see varies examples where calls go against the non blue bloods. At the end of the show they wondered if Memphis won the National Title, would they have gone after Memphis and the NCAA did not prove the case against Memphis.
That said if you watched the 30 on 30 'One and not Done' last night you could see varies examples where calls go against the non blue bloods. At the end of the show they wondered if Memphis won the National Title, would they have gone after Memphis and the NCAA did not prove the case against Memphis.
See UNI vs Texas AtM a couple years ago. UNI held a 15 point lead with less than 2 minutes left and LOST. CBS wanted the OU v AtM sweet 16 matchup and they got it.
They can still be hired for one of the nine (soon ten) on-field positions, just not for quality control, director of football operations, recruiting coordinator.
That said if you watched the 30 on 30 'One and not Done' last night you could see varies examples where calls go against the non blue bloods. At the end of the show they wondered if Memphis won the National Title, would they have gone after Memphis and the NCAA did not prove the case against Memphis.
See UNI vs Texas AtM a couple years ago. UNI held a 15 point lead with less than 2 minutes left and LOST. CBS wanted the OU v AtM sweet 16 matchup and they got it.
UNI simply didn't know how to run an inbounds play. That was on the coach. They couldn't get the pass inbounds.
(04-16-2017 10:42 AM)arkstfan Wrote: They can still be hired for one of the nine (soon ten) on-field positions, just not for quality control, director of football operations, recruiting coordinator.
I still think it's stupid. For every example of someone abusing the practice for a recruiting advantage (looking at you Harbaugh) there's five where the off-the-field position is an actual entry level position for a high school coach into college coaching. Clemson's new Safeties coach Mickey Conn spent a year as a defensive analyst, Georgia's RB and former Georgia Southern interim HC Dell McGee started as an analyst at Auburn, Olten Downs, current Safeties coach at Georgia Southern started as a quality control coach at UGA.
All this is doing is limiting the opportunities for coaches to advance in their careers. Stupid rule.
(04-16-2017 10:42 AM)arkstfan Wrote: They can still be hired for one of the nine (soon ten) on-field positions, just not for quality control, director of football operations, recruiting coordinator.
I still think it's stupid. For every example of someone abusing the practice for a recruiting advantage (looking at you Harbaugh) there's five where the off-the-field position is an actual entry level position for a high school coach into college coaching. Clemson's new Safeties coach Mickey Conn spent a year as a defensive analyst, Georgia's RB and former Georgia Southern interim HC Dell McGee started as an analyst at Auburn, Olten Downs, current Safeties coach at Georgia Southern started as a quality control coach at UGA.
All this is doing is limiting the opportunities for coaches to advance in their careers. Stupid rule.
(04-16-2017 10:42 AM)arkstfan Wrote: They can still be hired for one of the nine (soon ten) on-field positions, just not for quality control, director of football operations, recruiting coordinator.
I still think it's stupid. For every example of someone abusing the practice for a recruiting advantage (looking at you Harbaugh) there's five where the off-the-field position is an actual entry level position for a high school coach into college coaching. Clemson's new Safeties coach Mickey Conn spent a year as a defensive analyst, Georgia's RB and former Georgia Southern interim HC Dell McGee started as an analyst at Auburn, Olten Downs, current Safeties coach at Georgia Southern started as a quality control coach at UGA.
All this is doing is limiting the opportunities for coaches to advance in their careers. Stupid rule.
Our defensive line coach started in a quality control position at Arkansas after being a high school coach. Rule might have kept him out because UArk signs kids from his high school regularly. Then again it might not have. When Blake Anderson interviewed for the AState job after the 2012 season he listed the guy as someone he wanted for an on-field coach. Anderson didn't get the gig and the guy took a quality control spot. Year later, Anderson gets hired and hires him so it might have prevented him from starting his college career by a year but not stopped him from moving up.
(04-16-2017 10:42 AM)arkstfan Wrote: They can still be hired for one of the nine (soon ten) on-field positions, just not for quality control, director of football operations, recruiting coordinator.
I still think it's stupid. For every example of someone abusing the practice for a recruiting advantage (looking at you Harbaugh) there's five where the off-the-field position is an actual entry level position for a high school coach into college coaching. Clemson's new Safeties coach Mickey Conn spent a year as a defensive analyst, Georgia's RB and former Georgia Southern interim HC Dell McGee started as an analyst at Auburn, Olten Downs, current Safeties coach at Georgia Southern started as a quality control coach at UGA.
All this is doing is limiting the opportunities for coaches to advance in their careers. Stupid rule.
None of those coaches would have been limited by the new rule unless the college that hired them had recruited players from the high school team they coached. College teams remain free to hire any high school coach for any job as long as they didn't recently recruit a player from that high school.
Read what Gus Malzahn said in that USA Today article:
Quote:Malzahn, who was a high school coach before moving into college coaching in 2006 as an assistant at Arkansas, has hired nine high school coaches, including Drinkwitz.
“Not one time did I recruit any of their players,” he said. “I’m trying to put good high school coaches and people into college football. We’re not hiring them to get players here. If that rule passes, it’s gonna hurt. Every one of those (nine coaches), I wouldn’t have been able to hire.”
Hey, Gus, read the rule. It wouldn't have stopped you from hiring any of those high school coaches because you didn't recruit any of their players.
(04-25-2017 12:11 AM)Wedge Wrote: None of those coaches would have been limited by the new rule unless the college that hired them had recruited players from the high school team they coached. College teams remain free to hire any high school coach for any job as long as they didn't recently recruit a player from that high school.
"Sorry kid. We know we are your dream school but because we hired this coach two years ago we are prohibited from recruiting you. If you were graduating next year we could, but because you are graduating within two years we can't."
(04-25-2017 12:11 AM)Wedge Wrote: None of those coaches would have been limited by the new rule unless the college that hired them had recruited players from the high school team they coached. College teams remain free to hire any high school coach for any job as long as they didn't recently recruit a player from that high school.
"Sorry kid. We know we are your dream school but because we hired this coach two years ago we are prohibited from recruiting you. If you were graduating next year we could, but because you are graduating within two years we can't."
The intent is to prevent a school from making a quid pro quo hire of a high school coach, say as a video coordinator or assistant director of scheduling, or whatever, to get a player from that high school, whether that player is a senior or junior at the time of the coach's hiring.
College basketball has lived with this rule for a very long time - the rule still allows a college team to hire the coach (or parent) of a player as long as the coach (or parent) is hired for a full-time assistant coaching position, and college basketball programs have sometimes done that. When Larry Brown brought Danny Manning to Kansas, he hired Manning's dad as an assistant coach. Cuonzo Martin has hired Michael Porter Sr. as an assistant coach at Mizzou to get Michael Porter Jr. as a Mizzou freshman this fall. And if it's a question of opportunity, each FBS team is allowed 9 full-time assistants (10 starting next year) whereas each D-I basketball team is allowed only 3 full-time assistants. So a CFB team has more "wiggle room" on its staff and can more easily give a full-time assistant's job to a parent or high school coach than a CBB team can.