Posted by colonels19 on 5/25/2015 11:53:00 AM (view original):
I think somewhere down the line, they increased the requirements (perhaps secretly) to get to D1.
Look at my Tark resume. I made it to D1 back around this time in 2010 after 2 CT wins and 2 consequent NT appearances (both epic losses).
I made the tourney back-to-back with Virginia Union in season 58 and 59, or 59 and 60 (I'm not looking at the resume, I just know this by heart lol) and was NOT immediately eligible for a D1 job, however magically come season 65, I was eligible, as referenced by me taking the Jacksonville job.
I was not able to get back to D1 again until season 103, as I was not qualified for any D1 job until then (though you can argue that my resume was somewhat...SOMEWHAT in tatters from season 67 to 102). My rep and loyalty were at A+ always throughout the duration.
I feel like the guidelines/rules/benchmarks for getting to D1 are at best, inconsistent, and have always felt that once you make D1 in a world, that you should always be eligible for at least 1 D1 job FOREVER in that world (I would argue all open D- positions in only the shittiest/lowest prestiged conferences).
At some point, I feel like someone said something to seble to silently change the criteria, and feel that there are more than a handful of D1 coaches (you know who you are) that like to get all high-horsed and look down your noses at the peons that aren't yet eligible for your "covenant"

i happen to agree with you on your idea of d1 coaches staying eligible once they make it. i'd be good with that, although i think an organic improvement to the system would beat an artificial one, in that regard.
also i think the d1 requirements you mention, a couple back to back NT performances (with either a good # of wins or some NT wins in there) is about right. i think typically you have to have to have something like 3 straight NT1s or a couple NT2s, to make the cut for d1. although for new-to-d1 coaches, i would definitely recommend waiting until you are eligible for more like a d+/c- job, before moving up, rather than taking an extremely difficult d- opening.
the part about it silently changing to get harder, however, i disagree with. the incident where you went from ineligible to eligible from season 60 to 65 with virginia union is a direct result of a publicly acknowledged bug (or maybe it was a feature in its time) where after 5 seasons of being inactive, a coach suddenly became eligible for significantly better jobs. i suspect this was old admin's way of getting coaches back into the swing of things, and experienced it myself, it was a pretty big swing, and also, after exactly 5 seasons for me (as new admin has acknowledged). it just sounds too deliberate to be a bug. but that is what seble calls it?
anyway, the only time the d1 eligibility changed in the last 7+ years is when seble redid the job logic a while back, to take into account more seasons. this change only affected d1 jobs and im not sure how it may have impacted going from d2/d3 to d1 in terms of difficulty. however, this change is well known and widely discussed, and certainly doesn't qualify as "silent".
otherwise i pretty much agree with the rest. including about the folks who look down on the guys who aren't eligible. i don't get why there should be that much of a requirement on getting jobs that there is no competition for. if there is competition, fine - but a requirement is still only half worth something there - as natural competition for a competitive job would generally eliminate the ridiculous cases where folks are clearly unqualified but still get the job. i wouldn't advocate for no requirements for any jobs, just let the best man win for them all, but i'm not terribly against it either (after a warm up period for new worlds). all in all i think it is stupid that resumes penalize folks so hard for struggling with a d1 rebuild, which is genuinely something that can challenge experienced and very capable coaches.
personally i would vote for making job requirements being based on the ceiling of your accomplishments - whatever the highest "score" your resume got, you keep that, in terms of simple qualification. thereafter, if multiple people qualified and applied, it would depend on recent accomplishments (although obviously a better algorithm than is in place today would be preferable).
edit: i think the 5 year "bug" is no longer in place today. not positive about that though - but it definitely was in the time colonel's is talking about.
5/25/2015 1:09 PM (edited)