Posted by dacj501 on 8/28/2012 3:04:00 PM (view original):
Posted by ike1024 on 8/28/2012 1:52:00 PM (view original):
Posted by dacj501 on 8/28/2012 12:39:00 PM (view original):
Posted by jpmills3 on 8/28/2012 12:30:00 PM (view original):
And also to be clear and transparent, Mets went to Auburn after the fair play guidelines were updated with the 1000 mile rule, so it he would not have the expectation of being "ok." But he only moved there in the first place because MSU was too close (so he tried to make it work).
I do hate seeing good institutional coaches ran off. It is NOT good for the game. and there is definitely behind the scenes political stuff with conference rivalries that seems to drive many of these complaints.
That does not change my opinion on the subject matter of this post. that person had approval long ago. was told 800 miles was the rule. relied on that rule. its unfair to make take that person from their gig absent any evidence of shennanigans.
with that being said, i have some work to do!
I have tried to avoid analogies since I don't want to introduce straw men into this in any way, BUT - reading your last post reminded me of something from my youth. Back then the drinking age was 18. I had an older friend who turned 18 and celebrated appropriately. Later that year, the drinking age was raised to 19. Suddenly he was no longer able to legally buy or consume alcohol. Then he turned 19 and celebrated again. Later the age was raised to 21 and again he lost his right to use alcohol. Not because he did anything differently or wrong, but because the rules had changed and he was no longer in compliance with them. To me this is a similar thing. Receiving permission for something that did not violate any posted rule is one thing, having that permission carry over after a hardline rule is implemented is another in my book.
The Green Bay Packers are publicly owned. NFL teams are no longer able to be publicly owned. The Packers still have that right.
For every example you have, I promise you I have one that counters.
Obviously a new rule doesn't demand that no exceptions exist for those following the old one. The question is twofold: (1) is this the type of rule which should have allowed exceptions for long-time coaches; and (2) should WiS have been more transparent?
Certainly the answer to (2) is "yes." So that leaves the answer to (1). I think the answer is "no," but I can respect the opposite viewpoint. I certainly don't think you MUST be correct simply because the rule itself changed.
this is a good post. I agree with the answer to #2 of course.
I guess I was smart to avoid the analogy for so long, and would have been even smarter if I'd continued to do so. Regardless of that - I too see that some rules should have some provision for grandfathering. I don't think this should be one of them, and I especially don't think it should be applied to some coaches who held both schools before the new guidelines were introduced and not applied to others, as seems to have happened to acn.
Mostly I don't think that I should be subject to rules and limitations that others aren't in respect to the game. More broadly, I don't think anyone should benefit from something that others are specifically forbidden to benefit from (my use of benefit does not imply anything improper - the benefit may be simply the ability to have 2 teams on the same schedule for recruiting and whatnot...)
dac, i definitely agree consistency is a must. and todd is right - many states DID grandfather people in on the drinking rule change. its absurd to say, "you've been drinking for 2 years now (legally, probably many more), but now you are too young to drink for another year". it makes no damn sense.
the best i can do to appeal to you is this. think about the point in time in HD when you most loved a program of yours. any program. now imagine you had two, 850 miles apart, and you had coached both for years. you planned to keep both until you retired. now, wis changes the rule. are you supposed to lose 2 years of work into a program? it seems VERY harsh, at the least. a well intentioned coach did nothing wrong, and now he has to choose between the two programs he loves?
about a year or two ago, my d1 and d2 teams were only a few hundred miles apart. previous rules said you couldn't have teams in the same region in the same division. now, that divisional constraint appears gone. without question, if CS told me to drop one of those two schools, and to pick which, i'd have said do both and go **** yourself. im sure other coaches would approach it differently, but surely, many would be quite ****** off, and a few (i would include myself at one time, but not now) would probably retaliate, causing many many times more damage than the original situation was causing.