quote:
Originally posted by Bee>:
quote:
So one of the possible results of the rules changes is that DI baseball becomes, in many cases, a 3 year program?
how does that help the student athlete's graduation rate?
the ncaa must have some rationale
It won't, and as a matter of fact, looking at the APR criteria, the exemption for excluding drafted kids phases out and 3 year drafted kids who sign may possible erode the progress ratings.
*********
Posted December 11, 2007 09:18 PM
Figure I would toss a few cents in on the subject. I did my NCAA website surf to look at more rules, specifically the APR. What was interesting was this:
"The Academic Progress Rate (APR) is a key measure used to identify both high and low academic performing teams in the Division I Academic Performance Program (APP). Intended as a four-year rate of measure, the first full four-year data set will include academic years 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, and 2006-07."
That was part of the original draft. It ended with this:
"Elimination of the squad-size adjustment will begin with the 2007-08 APR reports for any team with an aggregate cohort of 30 or more student-athletes."
***If I read it correctly, it looks like they once gave programs a "pass" for the draft eligible underclassmen, those leaving for Pro baseball. That now appears to be phased out?
So the question is this:
If a programs APR will be reduced by academically eligible kids that opt for the draft prior to graduation, does a D1 coach need to overly concern himself not only with grades of recruits, but with "grades" of recruits, i.e too many blue-chippers?
What if a D1 head coach gets lucky and has a dozen potential underclass players that have peaked the interest of MLB. What happens to his APR with a mass exodus ? Would this change how he deals with these players and the scouts that are tracking them?
Does the coach need to have a roster foundation of "for sure seniors-to-be" with good grades to offset the departures?
Ever notice that past rosters were represented the least by seniors?
Do you think senior-laden teams are the future now ?
I suppose if a kid can rake a baseball or consistently get kids out as a pitcher, then they have no concerns.
I also disagree with the new transfer rule waiting period. If a kid wants to transfer,and does, and waits an entire season to play, he will still not graduate from his original program and affect the APR in a negative fashion.
Is that one year wait that much of a deterrent if the coach has told him he won't play there?