
01-21-2009, 06:48 PM
|
 |
Sr. Moderator
|
|
Join Date: Jul 2007
Team: Rutgers
Posts: 14,383
vCash: 461
|
|
Do you have TimesSelect access? I'll C/P my segways and the quotes.
Quote:
As Lemming explains it, Penn State under Joe Paterno was the first school to pioneer the concept of a verbal commitment (in order to deter other schools from contacting its committed prospects) and accelerating and compressing the recruiting process."We have nothing near the drama we used to have 10 years ago," said Tom Lemming, the longtime national recruiting guru who works as an analyst for College Sports TV (CSTV). "There's close to a dozen big-time guys left (uncommitted) as we approach signing day when 10 years ago, there were a couple hundred left on signing day." Lemming traces the change to 1993 when Penn State lost several top in-state players to other schools, including quarterback Ron Powlus, who was ranked as the nation's No.'1 player and went to Notre Dame. That caused Nittany Lions coach Joe Paterno to start offering scholarships before a high school player's senior season. "Up until then, that was nearly unheard of," Lemming said. "(Other schools) started doing it slowly, then about five years ago, everybody started doing it." Joe Paterno did not morph into the nation's favorite curmudgeon over night. As far back as the 70s, Paterno railed against what he saw as widespread abuses in the recruiting process.Finally, a school appears to be losing out. Accordingly, a coach whose job is on the line or who has been hired by a college president to and told to win - not teach well, but win - may do what he believes the college president, the athletic director, the alumni, and friends of the institution want him to do. He arranges for the prospect to be offered extra money, clothes, or other illegal inducements. He isn't really concerned about getting caught because the N.C.A.A. (National Collegiate Athletic Association) has ineffective investiation and enforcement apparatus. - "OPINION: A College Coach Tells Why Recruiting Abuses Happen; Winning Above All Coaches on Spot Size of a Giant Just Can't Say No", New York Times, March 17, 1974 Paterno continues on, railing against "distorted values" and "imaginary utopias" stemming from the process, wherein, a grown man must prostrate himself before a teenage football star and grovel. Even then, it was clear that Mr. Paterno was no fan of the recruiting process. And he had good reason not to be. As Beano Cook recalled several years ago, a young Mike Ditka reneged on a promise to attend Penn State, unable to resist the lure of Pittsburgh's dental school.
|
That, presumably, would be where I talk about Nastase. However, does anyone have the correct spelling of that name? I can't find it anywhere.
If you don't have TimesSelect and want a copy of the pdf (the first part is cut off a little and hard to read), send an email through my profile with your address.
Last edited by GoRU : 01-21-2009 at 06:55 PM.
|