We all know blatant collusion when we see it. Coaches sitemailing to ask about recruiting targets/intentions. Explicit non-compete agreements between teams. Coaches giving out critical information during recruiting.
But what about pre-recruiting psychological intimidation, meant to scare other teams off from tangling with you? I'm talking about things posted either *before* recruiting starts or *after* it ends. Not during recruiting itself. Things like this, which are all variations of things I've seen recently:
"This is the most money I've ever had for recruiting. Hopefully I don't blow it!"
"My general rule is not to battle conference mates unless they come into my state."
"I only have 1 guard coming back next season, so that position is a very high priority for me."
"I always protect my territory. I may not succeed, but if someone comes in here, they'd better know they're not getting anyone cheap."
"There's only one guy I really want, so I'm probably going to take a couple walk-ons to make sure I can get him."
"Well, I'm done. Still have $60k left, so I'll have a ton of carryover for next season."
"It sure is nice having full carryover after having no openings last season!"
"Wow, I always thought $120k was the max you could have for recruiting. Guess not!"
I think a lot of us have probably engaged in something like this at one time or another, myself included. Maybe innocently, maybe calculated. Maybe bluffing, maybe not. But it is sending a message that might make people think twice about getting into battle with you.
What do people think about is? OK because it's out in the open, and of a general non-specific nature, and is really just harmless banter? Or is it crossing the line because it's trying to influence the decisions people make during recruiting?