Posted by snafu4u on 6/23/2018 9:33:00 PM (view original):
Posted by topdogggbm on 6/23/2018 9:20:00 PM (view original):
Posted by snafu4u on 6/23/2018 8:53:00 PM (view original):
Posted by shoe3 on 6/23/2018 8:37:00 PM (view original):
Probability. And yeah, you gambled. Dropping minutes for a freshman that finished first midterm at 2.5 is a gamble.
How is it a gamble when he finished that semester at a 2.9 after the reduced minutes?
I'm different than most coaches with study hall. I'm much more cautious.
there's nothing that tells me.... "only 2.9? Ah, he's a genius and i can drop his study hall"
I've had discussions with a few coaches on these forums. And they tell me i'm wasting minutes. And maybe i am. But I NEVER want to deal with an ineligible player.
Personally I start with 10 for freshman until first midterm, and NEVER drop below 6 for freshman. Even if they're 4.0. I have started to change regarding So, Jr, & Sr. And i'm cutting minutes there. But freshmen are so sporadic that it scares me.
I was similar to this when I first started HD...kept all of my players at or above 3.0. Only had one player ever become ineligible, and it was just due to early negligence, not seeing what I could get away with or gambling (happened 2nd or 3rd season...many years ago, wasn't paying attention/didn't know emails from AD mattered). Many seasons later I had an extremely successful veteran coach explain his practice strategy to me and saw how many minutes I was wasting. Reduced overall minutes to target 2.5 GPA max, and in 135 seasons have not had another player ineligible until now. My complain is the complete lack of correlation between practice minutes and GPA outcome in this situation. It does not match anything I have seen in my experience in my last 11 years as a HD coach. GPA was great at 6 min. GPA was bad at 4 min. I increase minutes 50% more than last known good level, yet GPA stays exactly the same as lowest bad level.
Again, I agree i'm over doing it, with my freshman SH minutes. But like everyone is saying, that's a choice/risk we decide as coaches. In your situation, I wouldn't look at it as "his GPA went up with a reduction". I would look at the whole picture as "this player is a concern, as his numbers are all over the place"
A few ways to look at this.... if you're not playing it safe, and you "aim" for 2.5 (which isn't a great and/or safe GPA for eligibility. It's a passing grade. But on a scale of 2.0 to 4.0 it's really low "target" imo), only having 2 players become ineligible in 135 seasons is an excellent percentage. It just sucks for you now because it happened in the present time.
If you're willing to play with fire, sometimes it burns. And you've gotten off easy in the long term. If you're willing to play it safe, you'll never have this issue. But the draw back is that you'll waste 2-4 minutes of practice time daily (which I think is NOTHING in the big picture. What's it change.... maxing out players late junior year instead of early senior year? That's no big deal at all for me personally)
edit.... after reading this again, it may seem i'm being aggressive towards you. I'm not at all. I'm saying that you caught a really bad break. BUT that possibility is there if you push the limits sometimes. That's all i'm getting at
6/23/2018 10:33 PM (edited)