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Welcome to The Crootletter (sign up to get this in your inbox every morning!), SB Nation's daily college football recruiting newsletter.
Friday, we discussed the NCAA’s proposal to add two early signing periods. But that was just part of a greater proposal. Another part concerns limiting the number of days schools can put on football camps. Included in that is satellite camps.
The proposals – one for the Football Bowl Subdivision and one for the Football Championship Subdivision – would require schools to choose not more than 10 days for conducting or participating in football camps and clinics. This is a modification in the number of days and the manner that football coaches can participate in camps and clinics. Currently, coaches can participate in camps and clinics during two periods of 15 consecutive days. In the new proposal, the 10 days would not have to be consecutive, providing greater flexibility to attend more events and visit with more students at various locations.
With a refinement in the purpose of the camps to one focused primarily on recruiting rather than instruction, which traditionally has been done in the scholastic environment, the camps must be owned, operated and conducted by NCAA member schools and occur on the school’s campus or in facilities the school primarily uses for practice or competition. Keeping camps and clinics at known facilities will better protect the health and safety of participating students, members said.
If passed, this will limit the exposure for some kids, which would be bad.
But it will also protect parents some in that camps will no longer be run by shady third parties in a spot with no connection to the school. Currently, there are some people getting rich playing on the hopes and dreams of parents who think their child has a shot to attend a school way above his talent level. What happened was a barnstorming tour with hundreds of campers at every stop, and very limited instruction.
Penn State head coach James Franklin agrees with the notion that the reform could help remove some of the shady third parties from the recruiting process.
“I don’t think it should be with third parties, recruiting services or things like that,” Franklin said. “I think it should be on college campuses with college staffs. If you want to go somewhere else and do it, great. But it should be run by colleges. I think we’re asking for trouble with those things.”
It would also help to normalize the quality of setting. Colleges have nice facilities and safe playing surfaces. Random parks and many high schools do not.
But also note that the NCAA now admits that the camps are truly dual-purpose, both instruction and recruiting. Admitting this helps to lessen the NCAA’s burden of enforcing anti-recruiting rules in what are clearly recruiting settings.
If passed, the rule will also help smaller schools who cannot afford to put on months’ worth of satellite camps.
Quickly
Ohio State hosted a very talented group of recruits over the weekend against Indiana, including five-star receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones. Jones attends Detroit’s Cass Tech, so the obvious assumption made by many is that he’ll stay in state and pick Michigan, but that’s not necessarily guaranteed. But the Buckeyes gave it their best shot. Plus, OSU running back Mike Weber and and defensive back Damon Webb are Cass Tech alumni.
Oh No!Rutgers invited hundreds of recruits to its game against Michigan. Its 78-0 loss to Michigan. That should make it easy to sell playing time.
Miami dismissed Sam Bruce, its top-rated recruit of Mark Richt’s first class before he ever played a game. Bruce was a national top-100 player at receiver, so I’ll assume he was a huge headache for the Hurricanes to dismiss him so quickly. Bruce will be a big target on the transfer market.
Speaking of transfers, Virginia Tech really hit a home run with junior college QB Jerod Evans. Mercy.
P5 QBs w/15+ pass TDs & no more than 1 INT in 1st 6 games of the year, last decade:
— David Hale (@DavidHaleESPN) October 10, 2016
Jerod Evans
Marcus Mariota (2x)
Bryce Petty
Geno Smith
SB Nation’s Bill Connelly asks what is wrong with Michigan State? The Spartans simply cannot score, but there is more to it than that.