If a school offers a kid, it's because they believe that he's the 'best' and they want him to join their class. If a kid accepts an offer, it's because (a) he wants a place for sure; (b) he wants to go there. Nothing is certain until the signed LOI comes back. However........nothing is as it seems.
If a college wants to renege/force out/go another way with a kid, they will suffer eternal damnation from the recruits (at least for that year) and schools if they 'pull' a kid's schollie. However, they have subtle ways to make the kids agree. 'we've got verbals from 5 kids we consider better at your position, waddya think?' or somesuch. That gets the school off the hook with the other HS coaches. (no one wants their kids hung out to dry). But make no mistake, recruiting is a crapshoot all the way. What started out a lean year at say, DB, can turn out to be a great year, and that kid would take up a schollie and ride the pine. Better to get another RB or somesuch. But it's all a matter of style on how they pull 'em. OSU pulls if there is 'civil disobedience' with the kid after the offer. People understand the 'good citizen' approach. Even if the kid busts up a knee, the school has to honor it's commitment, lest the other recruits see the schollie being pulled and shun the school for not backing up the player.
On the other hand, if a kid grabs the first/second offer, and continues to look around, then IMO the school has a valid right to question. Whatcha doing? looking around if you 'love' us? Well, I'm just not certain about ___, so I'm taking an official or two. The kid might be afraid that there won't be a scholarship available for them when the nut-cutting time approaches (first week of Feb) unless they tie one up now.
No less than Coop said that he'd rather pass on a kid if he turned out to be great, face him once a year rather than sign him and face him every day if he was marginal. Makes sense to me.
Glad I don't have to make those decisions, as it's a chess game that doesn't have a cut-and-dried ending, but shades of gray. I live and die by who the Buckeyes recruit and sign, and the coaching staff seems to coach the 3*s into first round NFL draftees, and some of the 5*s don't seem to pan out. So I guess it's deciding what traits you want, and try to make the best choice possible, given the skills of the coaching staff you have.
Mods, if this is similar to other responses, feel free to deep six it....
:gobucks3::gobucks4: