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2. Speaking of Clowney, his addition gives South Carolina 32 signees in the 2011 class. So much for the crack down on oversigning, huh? Four of the Gamecocks? signees apparently are already enrolled, which gets them to the all-important 28-max number enacted by the SEC last year and the rest of the NCAA this year. But that means at least three of the remaining signees either are expected not to qualify academically, will be convinced to grayshirt or will have to be cut loose.
The Gamecocks already have drawn criticism from the website Oversigning.com because they withdrew the scholarship offers of two other recruits who had been committed to USC before national signing day. One of those is Atlanta?s own Lorenzo Mauldin, who committed to South Carolina last July. Neither Mauldin nor Maynard Jackson High coach Eric Williams could be reached for comment, but Mauldin has been quoted saying he is not upset and will wait to sign with the Gamecocks at a later date. We?ll see.
"Shoved away" due to oversigning, Lorenzo Mauldin still hopes to end up at South Carolina
12:33 pm February 24, 2011, by Chip Towers
When it comes to talking about his life, Lorenzo Mauldin is not a big stickler for details. He tends to gloss over big chunks of his past, summarizing large expanses of it like asphalt over a highway full of potholes. The way he tells it, there are miles of smooth road both ahead and behind.
It?s easier that way, for Mauldin is a young man who is not terribly concerned about where he?s been, only where he?s going. That he?s not entirely certain of his destination is immaterial.
Mauldin is pretty sure his road will eventually lead to the University of South Carolina. Anywhere he ends up between now and then is, well, better than where he?s been.
?I?m pretty much set on South Carolina because of the fact that they will, if I don?t make the score that they need, they will put me into prep school for a semester and I will be there until early January,? said Mauldin, a 6-foot-4, 240-pound defensive end at Atlanta?s Maynard Jackson High School. ?So I mean that?s pretty good. I?m used to making good decisions in life and to me that sounds like a pretty good decision.?
Mauldin is used to making hard decisions. He has been a ward of the state most of his life. His mother has been incarcerated since he became a teen-ager and his father, who lives in California, is not involved in his life.
Cont'd ...
Examining the other side of oversigning
Yes, the Gamecocks offered Mauldin a scholarship last July. And, yes, Mauldin accepted. But he was also told that there was a chance he might have to wait until January 2012 before enrolling on scholarship, which is more commonly referred to as grayshirting.
South Carolina coaches told him that possibility would only strengthen if he had not met NCAA entrance requirements prior to signing day.
Two weeks prior to signing day, South Carolina coaches reminded Mauldin that there might not be a scholarship available in this signing class.
So, at least, it sounds like South Carolina was upfront with Mauldin that he might have to attend prep school and/or wait until January to go on scholarship.
Cont'd ...
Gatorubet;1874145; said:I just never got excited about the Ole Ball Coach signing that many like y'all go on about. I think Steve is a pretty straight shooter. And he was just a few years ahead of me at my fraternity, so I have to defend Brother Spurrier.![]()
BB73;1879775; said:In fairness to Spurrier, since he can't comment on an unsigned recruit, it's possible the kid was told that his being able to sign an LOI was contingent on qualifying academically.
Apparently the possibility of grayshirting was mentioned to Mauldin by the coaches.
Yes, the Gamecocks offered Mauldin a scholarship last July. And, yes, Mauldin accepted. But he was also told that there was a chance he might have to wait until January 2012 before enrolling on scholarship, which is more commonly referred to as grayshirting.
South Carolina coaches told him that possibility would only strengthen if he had not met NCAA entrance requirements prior to signing day.
Two weeks prior to signing day, South Carolina coaches reminded Mauldin that there might not be a scholarship available in this signing class.
As Critics Blast the Practice, Spurrier, Nutt and Petrino Say It's Necessary—and Helpful
South Carolina's Steve Spurrier, whose 2011 recruiting class is considered one of the nation's finest, ended up with three more players than NCAA rules will allow him to add to his final roster in the fall. In a rare move, Spurrier was forced to tell two recruits who'd committed to play for South Carolina that there wouldn't be room for them in this fall's class.
Well that ends that debate :pSpurrier said oversigning is "helpful" because so many of the players in the state come from underprivileged backgrounds and may not qualify academically. He said the Big Ten, which has curbed oversigning for decades, is making a mistake by doing so. "I think that really hurts them a lot," Spurrier said. "They end up giving scholarships to a lot of walk-ons."
I agree it is a much better version of oversigning, but there is still plenty of 'bad' involved, even if it is an orchestrated accident like 3 extra kids qualifying.Arkansas coach Bobby Petrino, who signed 31 recruits in 2009 and is a few players over the 85-player NCAA limit at the moment, said oversigning is fine if coaches are forthright about it. "I don't see it as a bad thing unless you're being dishonest or waiting until the last minute, which eliminates their visit opportunities with other schools," he said.
Houston Nutt, Mississippi's coach, signed 31 players in 2008, 37 in 2009, 25 last year and 28 last month. He said oversigning is sometimes "necessary," mainly to plug holes. This year, he said, two cornerbacks—Jermaine Whitehead and Floyd Raven—defected at the last minute. "Now I'm sitting here without two corners. You just can't have this perfect world of, 'We're gonna sign 22 this year.'"
But in some cases, the team doesn't lose enough players through attrition to account for all the extras it signed, so the coach needs to get rid of some people. Rather than cut them outright—which would cost them their scholarships and create ill will among future recruits—teams force some to "grayshirt," or delay their enrollment for a semester. Others are asked to take a "medical scholarship" which allows them to keep their scholarship so long as they agree they are too injured to continue playing for the team. Some are strongly encouraged to transfer.
Defensive tackle Uriah Grant of Miramar, Fla., committed to play for Nutt in Mississippi last month. Grant said the extra bodies, and the extra competition, "doesn't bother me—I actually embrace it. I know I'm gonna be a starter."
Offensive tackle Jonah Austin of New Orleans, who signed at LSU, said he wasn't aware that LSU is about 11 players over budget—and that it's not something he's thought much about. Cornerback Senquez Golson of Pascagoula, Miss., who chose Mississippi over Florida State, said that at the risk of sounding "cocky" he's not worried about being "run off" by coaches. "I don't think I'll be one of those players," he said.
And this is why I don't accept Gator's notions that:I knew they were signing quite a few players," says Calloway, but "I'm not afraid of the competition."
I appreciate a more upfront approach, but it still doesn't remove gambling with kids' futures, particularly when otherwise eligible players (either on roster or incoming) have to sacrifice because you guessed wrong about how many kids would fail.Petrino, the Arkansas coach, said he tries to follow a formula. He signs 19 players he knows are "academically gonna make it without being a load on our academic support staff," six guys who may or may not qualify, and three to four players who have "absolutely no chance" of qualifying. (He signs the last group so that "they feel a commitment to us," and stashes them in junior college for a few years.) Petrino said he makes sure borderline cases are aware of what they need to do in order to qualify, as well as their odds of making the fall roster. "They understand that hey, we're gonna oversign, so if it's late in the summer and they haven't qualified yet, you might have to grayshirt," he said.
Will Spurrier's methods still be defended?Sometimes, however, the math simply goes awry. This year, Spurrier said that so many recruits chose South Carolina that they wound up with two more players than they could take under conference rules. The team told Jordan Montgomery, a linebacker from Groveland, Fla. and Lorenzo Mauldin, a defensive end from Atlanta, that there wasn't room for them in this year's class.
Montgomery's high school coach, Walter Banks, said, "I told them this was foul. I didn't have a clue until 18 hours before signing day, and if they say anything else, they're lying."
jwinslow;1881172; said:Will Spurrier's methods still be defended?
Which obviously comes with a grain of salt given the source, but it certainly stirs things up.If lies were told, then that is that.
ScriptOhio;1883431; said:The hot button issue of oversigning is no longer just being examined by the media, the NCAA is taking a closer look into the issue as well.
The Division I Football Issues Committee has agreed to monitor a recent rule limiting schools to signing 28 recruits to a National Letter of Intent (NLI). Coaches have only 25 scholarships per year to give out but may sign up to 28 in case several recruits do not qualify academically.
The hot button issue of oversigning becomes especially newsworthy when schools have to tell recruits that they are no longer welcome because there is not a scholarship available. South Carolina, for example, signed 31 players to a letter of intent in 2011. Coaches usually try to keep players committed to the school but will re-route them to a prep school for a year or grayshirt them by having them enroll in the spring.
According to the NCAA release, the administrator of the NLI, Susan Peal, says the NLI's governing body does not support the grayshirting policy some schools use. If a player is persuaded by a coach to grayshirt and does not wish to so, their letter of intent can be considered void and they may sign when another school.
The new rule on oversigning, 15.5.1.10.1, and the rise in ways around it are forcing the NCAA to take a serious look at the practices schools use when signing football players.
?This rule has only been in effect for one year, and we want to take some time to see if that?s the perfect number," NCAA Division I Football Committee Chair Nick Carparelli said. ?Certainly, the committee will continue to monitor it, and we can re-evaluate to see if there is a more appropriate number if necessary.?
The NCAA is not the only group of people taking action to combat oversigning as several high school coaches are becoming proactive in trying to stop the practice by outright banning colleges from recruiting their kids if they oversign. South Lake High School (Groveland, Fla.) head coach Walter Banks banned South Carolina after one of his players, Jordan Montgomery, was told he could not enroll because of the numbers crunch.
?I cannot look a kid and their parent in the face and say you can trust what a University of South Carolina coach says,? Banks told The State newspaper.
Entire article: http://eye-on-recruiting.blogs.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/26895818/27754192
buxfan4life;1883471; said:Gator to Spurrier's defense in 3......2.......1.........