Saturday, September 01, 2012

Upon Reflection

I am really disappointed in last night’s NC State – Tennessee football game. Not by losing – but by how we lost.

State was supposed to have a great offensive line this year. The secondary was supposed to be outstanding. The running game was unproven but again, expected to be substantially better than last year. Our only real question was supposed to be the defensive line.

Our offensive line sucked – they couldn’t protect QB Mike Glennon for $#*t. Our defense got burned repeatedly on long passes and in the running game.

Basically, you could see from the beginning that State was clearly outclassed by Tennessee in just about every phase of the game. The score, 35 to 19, is an accurate reflection of the teams.

Tennessee had better and faster athletes on the field.

If We Want To Win . . .

If you’re going to win games – you have to have the athletes.

To get the blue chip athletes – your school must allow recruitment of academically questionable kids. With 85 scholarships allowed – to have a reasonably good to great program – you’ll need about 10 to 20 or so of those kids as blue chip recruits – who, typically – aren’t going to be joining Mensa.

The whole school and program has to be in on the deal to recruit them. The coach, the chancellor, the booster club – everyone has to buy in. Not from a ‘how can we cheat and get away with it’ perspective (see Butch Davis, John Blake, UNC-CHeat and Nevin Shapiro, Miami) – but from a how to get these kids into class and give them a chance to succeed approach (as well as play football).

It can be done. Stanford does it, Boise State does it and in the ACC Florida State, Virginia Tech and Clemson does it (mostly clean).

You need to create a program (actually 2 or 3 programs) where they have a reasonable chance to graduate. Say, for instance, a degree in Physical Education. Something they can relate to. Throw in some personal finance courses (so they can learn to handle their own money someday) and other practical electives. Have a strong academic support program – tutoring – monitoring – etc. – and see how it goes. No basket weaving classes – real programs (just not Advance Particle Physics).

A top 10 program will have about 2 or 3 or maybe 4 (in a really good year) NFL draft picks. There might be a couple of kids who make it to the NFL through camp tryouts. The rest of the 20 blue chip recruits will need to actually graduate with skills they can use in adult life.

Starting in 2016 the academic standards for scholarships is going to toughen up considerably. One article I’ve read stated that 40% of today’s football and basketball scholarship kids wouldn’t qualify. BUT – even with the tougher requirements – schools will still be able to offer scholarships to kids who don’t qualify. They will just have to sit out their first year – to go to class – and hopefully acclimate to the college environment. Yeah – that’s going to happen.

These ‘academic redshirts’ (as they will be called) will still be dumb as bricks. And the big time programs (SEC) will recruit them. It will just be an enforced red shirt season for the same blue chip recruits. Then, just like now, if you want a winning program – you’ll have to recruit these kids. And – have a program where they can major and hopefully graduate. Heck – they’ll have 5 years to graduate – I see that as improving their academic chances.

If State wants a top tier program – we’ll have to recruit these kids. We’ll have to ride herd on them to keep them in class, on track and out of trouble. (Face it – stupid kids are the ones who do stupid things that get them in trouble.)

That’s the only way State will get the athletes to compete against average to mediocre SEC schools like Tennessee.


1 comment:

Fritz said...

Or, just be satisfied with an 8 or 9 win season and a nice bowl game.

The more I think about it, I respect Tom Osborne's teams that won 8, 9 or 10 wins a year, competed for the big bowls, but never won.

When Nebraska won in the 90s we recruited questionable players (Lawrence Phillips???) and played them.

I find that embarrassing in retrospect.

I can't remember the coach at Clemson that won 8 or 9 games a year and got chased out of town, I liked that guy. He went to Arkansas and got chased out as well.