Posted by milkamania on 6/6/2012 12:48:00 PM (view original):
Posted by rednu on 6/6/2012 12:41:00 PM (view original):
I'm not sure I agree with the logic on No. 3 of the "in all other cases" section.
I realize the intent here is to probably do away with the practice of giving/removing/regiving of the redshirt until you get a favorable RNG result and the kid takes it with no/minimal penalty. That said, it seems illogical to me that there's no counterweight given for where a kid will be more favorable to accept the redshirt as the season progresses and said player has yet to see a minute of live action. As I'm reading the above, the kid will respond the same if I offer a redshirt 14 times in the preseason or once a day for 14 days into the season, and that doesn't seem right. In the first case, the kid might be resistant thinking he can still contribute that year if given the chance. In the latter case, more than half a season has progressed and in that case a kid might finally be starting to see the writing on the wall and begin looking out for his longterm future, in which case saving the year of eligibility (so he can transfer, so he can play more at the school, whatever) would seem to be the better option.
I'm also a little confused by the "if you've told a kid he will not be redshirted" phrase. Is there a way we can tell a kid he won't be redshirted? Or will this now be the "default" belief of every recruit UNLESS they're informed there will be a redshirt? I'm just confused since start and minutes promises are covered under another line, and those would seem to me to be the only way a kid could get the impression within the game that he's not going to be redshirted.
I disagree with you here. What you are getting at, if I read correctly, is that leaving a guy off the depth chart all season and then giving him the redshirt the day before the season ends should convince him to take it without penalty, as he isn't going to play all season anyway. That to me seems to be a loophole to try and get around informing him during recruiting. Nobody would ever inform a recruit, then they would all just wait til the end of the year to do it.
You are reading me correctly milk, at least to an extent, but to clarify/extend on the point I was trying to make...
I'm NOT saying that I should be able to leave a kid out of the lineup and be insured the kid will take a redshirt after Game 26
without penalty. I AM saying there should be a greatly increased chance the kid will take the redshirt -- at that point either 1. the kid wants to stay with my program, in which case why wouldn't he accept the chance at a free year of eligibility and play 4 instead of 3? or 2. the kid is completely hacked off from riding the pine all season, in which case why wouldn't he take the redshirt and then bolt for the nearest exit, still with 4 years of playing time available rather than 3? I can think of very few cases where a kid with 0 minutes of PT at season's end, if confronted with the chance to call his non-year a redshirt season, would say no, coach, let's just burn this year.
The penalty though shouldn't be the kid not taking the redshirt. The penalty should be the kid hitting the bricks like a mad hornet and transferring if he's of the me-first persuasion who doesn't like sitting. It should actually be the case now as the loophole you point out exists in the status quo as well. If seble wants to tweak the transfer logic/percentage, he'd find a favorable audience in me to that proposal.
My biggest point though is that I don't think you can solely base a player''s reaction solely upon the number of redshirt attempts (which seems to be the proposal seble has listed), but that you also need to take into consideration things like when those attempts took place (as well as the personality of the kid, but I assume that's hidden in the equation somewhere...)