The solution is simple if the NCAA wants one. I believe Bo Schembechler proposed something like this many years ago.
When an LOI is signed, it would count as one of the 25 scholarships for that year. It cannot be reused until 4 years later, unless the player graduates. Also, only 85 LOIs can be received within any 4-year period.
Since the schools can only receive 25 LOIs in a given year, if the players don't qualify academically, that becomes the school's problem, and oversigning isn't an option to remedy the player not qualifying.
Colleges would need to recruit players that belong in college, not just football players who have a chance at qualifying.
Of course, with the provision that the scholarship can be re-used if the player graduates, I can see some schools managing to graduate a bunch of guys in 3 years. But the 25 and 85 LOI limits would prevent that from being exploited very much.
To me, this seemingly addresses most of the issues with oversigning. The major reason for the 85/25 limits was to stop schools from stocking up on players that wouldn't all see the field, benefiting the athletes and resulting in more parity among college teams.
If a guy plays football in a given season, and is on scholarship, he has to be counted as one of the 25/85. No academic scholarships should be allowed to stock extra football players. If a guy gets a legitimate medical hardship, he can stay on scholarship, but his LOI can't be freed up until the 4-year clock is up (or he graduates). It's just tough luck, but it's not another loophole to stash guys that aren't great players so they can be replaced with another warm body.
Some will say that this would harm guys that are marginal qualifiers. I think that more of them will end up at Sun Belt schools instead of the SEC, many of whose members would be forced to be more selective under the revised 85/25 LOI rules. That would also improve parity. Thus, I don't expect SEC Commissioner Mike Slive to support this proposal.
The intent of the original rules was to limit the number of players each team could take - those rules are being circumvented. Applying the limits to LOIs, rather than the way certain teams are allowed to exploit them, would restore the original intent of the scholarship limitations.
When an LOI is signed, it would count as one of the 25 scholarships for that year. It cannot be reused until 4 years later, unless the player graduates. Also, only 85 LOIs can be received within any 4-year period.
Since the schools can only receive 25 LOIs in a given year, if the players don't qualify academically, that becomes the school's problem, and oversigning isn't an option to remedy the player not qualifying.
Colleges would need to recruit players that belong in college, not just football players who have a chance at qualifying.
Of course, with the provision that the scholarship can be re-used if the player graduates, I can see some schools managing to graduate a bunch of guys in 3 years. But the 25 and 85 LOI limits would prevent that from being exploited very much.
To me, this seemingly addresses most of the issues with oversigning. The major reason for the 85/25 limits was to stop schools from stocking up on players that wouldn't all see the field, benefiting the athletes and resulting in more parity among college teams.
If a guy plays football in a given season, and is on scholarship, he has to be counted as one of the 25/85. No academic scholarships should be allowed to stock extra football players. If a guy gets a legitimate medical hardship, he can stay on scholarship, but his LOI can't be freed up until the 4-year clock is up (or he graduates). It's just tough luck, but it's not another loophole to stash guys that aren't great players so they can be replaced with another warm body.
Some will say that this would harm guys that are marginal qualifiers. I think that more of them will end up at Sun Belt schools instead of the SEC, many of whose members would be forced to be more selective under the revised 85/25 LOI rules. That would also improve parity. Thus, I don't expect SEC Commissioner Mike Slive to support this proposal.
The intent of the original rules was to limit the number of players each team could take - those rules are being circumvented. Applying the limits to LOIs, rather than the way certain teams are allowed to exploit them, would restore the original intent of the scholarship limitations.
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