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I don’t get it, am I missing something here.  Parents legally separate so that kid can play senior year of football.  Kid already has full scholarship at great legendary football program.  Kid is ranked 18th overall in the country, he is not going to lose his scholarship.  The legal separation can cause all types of issues if something goes wrong.  Why!!!  Help me understand why not get ready for college and do an early enrollment in the spring?

https://www.espn.com/college-f...n-cross-country-move

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Thanks for sharing the article.  I don't think you're not missing a thing.   People have differing priorities and will sacrifice anything to achieve those priorities.  Their single-mindedness and determination is pretty extreme. 

I can't say I'm too surprised.   I see quite a few people in my area move to different area high schools for football and basketball.  I see lots of kids reclassify from public to private high schools to get an additional year and a shot at an athletic scholarship.   In some cases, it is very understandable given that is their best shot at getting into college.   Separating from your spouse and moving cross country is a whole new level. 

As always, JMO.

Last edited by fenwaysouth

It's pretty easy for me to understand, but then I don't suffer from TPDS. He wants to play. Joe Burrow, Jalan Hurts, Dylan McCaffrey, I could go on. All QB's who lost the starting job and transferred. Seems the top programs don't recruit just one bluechip QB. So this kid is going to go into fall competition against a couple of ranked players who very well may have played their senior year after sitting out his. You don't get better sitting on your azz. Coach isn't going to award points because the parents made a decision that appeased some parents on a baseball forum.

The family of a kid from our high school pulled the “divorcing parents” move to transfer to a rival high school known for placing some players in the NBA. The problem was the kid didn’t make varsity.

Dad thought junior was overlooked and “screwed” by the coach at our high school. He wasn’t. At our high school at least the kid would have got garbage time minutes senior year. 

@RJM posted:

The family of a kid from our high school pulled the “divorcing parents” move to transfer to a rival high school known for placing some players in the NBA. The problem was the kid didn’t make varsity.

Dad thought junior was overlooked and “screwed” by the coach at our high school. He wasn’t. At our high school at least the kid would have got garbage time minutes senior year. 

You're comparing that player to a kid ranked 18th overall???? At 18th there are millions of dollars on the line. 

For all of the people who think they are crazy there are just as many who say I would do something similar to get that advantage.  If you can imagine he is playing for one of the top 10 teams in the nation while the P12 school players where he will go in the spring is not playing at all.  He might come into the program in January and be the top player if they play a spring season.  He got game reps and his teammates will not.  I don't agree with the divorce thing but I understand the passion thing.  Other than the divorce part, what is different than paying $85,000 to go to IMG for a year.  I know a dad who sent two sons down there and neither played varsity.  I could go on and on with the crazy stories.  Most just can't afford to do crazy stuff.  If he makes it to the pros or starts this spring then he will say it was worth it.

If he makes it to the pros or starts this spring then he will say it was worth it.

For every story of someone who makes it behind the scenes and unheard are the thousand who are now in therapy or are in bad need of therapy. Tiger Woods is a good example even for a person who made it.. Look how his life unraveled as soon as his father wasn’t there to manage it for him.

@2022NYC posted:

I am being asked to shell out thousands so a 15 year old can get a customized player development program that includes nutrition, S&C, throwing program...what the hell is wrong with me? 

What’s crazier is there are parents doing this for preteens. I remember being at a cocktail party when all the boys were twelve.

Dads were bragging about all the training their kids were getting in various sports. There were dads bragging about agility training. I wasn’t seeing any difference in agility at all. Then I was asked after staying silent. I was trying not to laugh. 

“He just plays the games.”

My son was big on reps relating to the sport whether with me or by himself. Spending money on physical development and agility training is for after puberty AND recognition a kid has legitimate athletic ability. 

Last edited by RJM

Us parents are crazy, huh? Ha!Ha! I will always remember being at a practice for a coach pitch league, so I guess the kids were 7 or 8 years old, and another father says to me, "You know my Junior is a pro prospect". I kind of chuckled and before I knew he was serious I said "Well I think at this age, depending on how you look at it, either all of them are prospects or none of them are prospects". We all think our children are special. And they really are! Maybe just not how we think they are. We so want them to have every possible chance to excel.

As the parent of an only child, I don't really see anything wrong with the moving to GA part, but the separation to appease the transfer rule is a bit much. 

My wife and I probably spend too much on our son's baseball, but he likes it and we are fortunate to be in a position to spend, so we do it. My first metal spikes were from a Play It Again, along with pretty much every bit of gear I had in HS. My family had no money growing up. I would look at the nice Rawlings Gold Gloves and know that I would never use one. Just bought my son a Pro Preferred IF/P glove this weekend and he's primarily a C. Now that I think about it, maybe some of the crap I buy him is just as much for me as it is for him, lol. 

I found a number, 24k HS in the US, so let's go with that. I don't know if all of them have a football team so let's say 20k do. That 20k HS football QB's. This kid is ranked 18th.

Quarterback salaries. Contract and per year. If money were not an issue would I do it, damn straight. IDK about the divorce part. Surely there was someplace to play that didn't necessitate that. But move my kid so he could stay on the field his senior year, that's a no brainer. Yes, he could get hurt, yes a meteor could wipe out all life on earth, yes he could decide to become a flamingo dancer. Worth the risk.

Patrick MahomesChiefs25$450,000,000$45,000,000   
Deshaun WatsonTexans25$156,000,000$39,000,000   
Russell WilsonSeahawks32$140,000,000$35,000,000   
Ben RoethlisbergerSteelers38$68,000,000$34,000,000   
Aaron RodgersPackers37$134,000,000$33,500,000   
Jared GoffRams26$134,000,000$33,500,000   
Kirk CousinsVikings32$66,000,000$33,000,000   
Carson WentzEagles28$128,000,000$32,000,000   
Dak PrescottCowboys27$31,409,000$31,409,000   
Matt RyanFalcons35$150,000,000$30,000,000   
Ryan TannehillTitans32$118,000,000$29,500,000   
Jacoby BrissettColts28$27,975,000$27,975,000   
Jimmy Garoppolo49ers29$137,500,000$27,500,000   
 
Last edited by SomeBaseballDad

 

Before throwing around nine figure contracts there are plenty of five star recruits who flop in college before even receiving the opportunity to flop in the NFL. Garcia is not a five star recruit.

2005-2014 ... Ryan Perrilloux, Mitch Mustain, John Brantley, Dayne Crist, Russell Sheppard, Jeff Driskell, Gunner Kiel, Max Browne

 

Last edited by RJM

Of course everyone should base their decisions on the failings of others. "That guy failed so I probably will too". Joe Burrow was a dumdass for leaving OSU because look at all the other QB's that transferred and washed out right? If Burrow's parents would have came here looking for advice you'd have told him keep your kid at OSU, have him get a degree, get a regular job. Quit chasing a dream, obviously he's not as good as you think he is. I know what you are going to say, "that was a one time thing". Guess what, it wouldn't have even been a one time thing if they came to this board looking for advice. 

Of course everyone should base their decisions on the failings of others. "That guy failed so I probably will too". Joe Burrow was a dumdass for leaving OSU because look at all the other QB's that transferred and washed out right? If Burrow's parents would have came here looking for advice you'd have told him keep your kid at OSU, have him get a degree, get a regular job. Quit chasing a dream, obviously he's not as good as you think he is. I know what you are going to say, "that was a one time thing". Guess what, it wouldn't have even been a one time thing if they came to this board looking for advice. 

What I posted is don’t start throwing around nine figure contracts just because someone is a four star prospect.

Number 18 on ESPN Top 300. Now let's go four years back and four years forward top 18. That puts this kid in the top 150 over a 8 year period. That's pretty dam good I don't care how many stars he is. Go further down that list I referred to and you'll see some pretty mediocre QB's making millions of dollars. This kid is good enough to be given every chance to play at that level. 

Playing for a high school coach who has been removed from two high schools for ethics violations should help prepare Garcia for college football. Can’t beat a quality, moral upbringing! Sounds like the kid fits right in playing for four high schools in four years. He’s definitely a loyal kid (sarcasm). The Valdosta coach and the kid appear to be a moral, ethical match made in heaven.

Last edited by RJM
@RJM posted:

Playing for a high school coach who has been removed from two high schools for ethics violations should help prepare Garcia for college football. Can’t beat a quality, moral upbringing! Sounds like the kid fits right in playing for four high schools in four years. He’s definitely a loyal kid (sarcasm). The Valdosta coach and the kid appear to be a moral, ethical match made in heaven.

to get technical about it, he attended 4 hs but only played for 3 (maybe only suited up and didn't actually get on the field for one of them).  but yeah...what RJM said

I found a number, 24k HS in the US, so let's go with that. I don't know if all of them have a football team so let's say 20k do. That 20k HS football QB's. This kid is ranked 18th.

Quarterback salaries. Contract and per year. If money were not an issue would I do it, damn straight. IDK about the divorce part. Surely there was someplace to play that didn't necessitate that. But move my kid so he could stay on the field his senior year, that's a no brainer. Yes, he could get hurt, yes a meteor could wipe out all life on earth, yes he could decide to become a flamingo dancer. Worth the risk.

Patrick MahomesChiefs25$450,000,000$45,000,000   
Deshaun WatsonTexans25$156,000,000$39,000,000   
Russell WilsonSeahawks32$140,000,000$35,000,000   
Ben RoethlisbergerSteelers38$68,000,000$34,000,000   
Aaron RodgersPackers37$134,000,000$33,500,000   
Jared GoffRams26$134,000,000$33,500,000   
Kirk CousinsVikings32$66,000,000$33,000,000   
Carson WentzEagles28$128,000,000$32,000,000   
Dak PrescottCowboys27$31,409,000$31,409,000   
Matt RyanFalcons35$150,000,000$30,000,000   
Ryan TannehillTitans32$118,000,000$29,500,000   
Jacoby BrissettColts28$27,975,000$27,975,000   
Jimmy Garoppolo49ers29$137,500,000$27,500,000   
 

..stomps feet stomps feet stomps feet....

"IT'S FLAMENCO DANCER!!  FLAMINGO IS A BIRD!!"

..waives arms over head and dramatically stomps feet some more..

@PABaseball posted:

He's going to college not the NFL. Sometimes you need to call it like it is - getting a divorce and moving 3000 miles away from home to "get some live reps" is crazy. 

If the parent have the money then so be it. The separation thing is a little out there but short of that, I'd do the same thing. You don't get better sitting on your azz. Who's to say he won't go from 4 stars to 5. Of course, he could go lower based on play. It's a gamble. Props to them for taking it. He's also just a commit and the Pac-12 isn't the SEC. If he lights it up I wouldn't be surprised to see him de-commit. And from the articles I've read, he's going to college then the NFL barring a collapse. I read he is compared to Ryan Tannehill, which isn't Tom Brady but that pay scale (4 years 118 million) is still a few dollars more than mine.

Playing for a high school coach who has been removed from two high schools for ethics violations should help prepare Garcia for college football. Can’t beat a quality, moral upbringing! Sounds like the kid fits right in playing for four high schools in four years. He’s definitely a loyal kid (sarcasm). The Valdosta coach and the kid appear to be a moral, ethical match made in heaven.

One of his other high school coaches was also removed for ethics violations, it said. 

to get technical about it, he attended 4 hs but only played for 3 (maybe only suited up and didn't actually get on the field for one of them).  but yeah...what RJM said

Wow. So this forum has become nothing more than a platform for virtue signaling. Those posts probably don't put this forum in the best light. Maybe exhibit A when someone asks "300 guests and 6 members online. Why don't more post here?"

Last edited by SomeBaseballDad

If the parent have the money then so be it. The separation thing is a little out there but short of that, I'd do the same thing. You don't get better sitting on your azz. Who's to say he won't go from 4 stars to 5. Of course, he could go lower based on play. It's a gamble. Props to them for taking it. He's also just a commit and the Pac-12 isn't the SEC. If he lights it up I wouldn't be surprised to see him de-commit. And from the articles I've read, he's going to college then the NFL barring a collapse. I read he is compared to Ryan Tannehill, which isn't Tom Brady but that pay scale (4 years 118 million) is still a few dollars more than mine.

Playing for a high school coach who has been removed from two high schools for ethics violations should help prepare Garcia for college football. Can’t beat a quality, moral upbringing! Sounds like the kid fits right in playing for four high schools in four years. He’s definitely a loyal kid (sarcasm). The Valdosta coach and the kid appear to be a moral, ethical match made in heaven.

One of his other high school coaches was also removed for ethics violations, it said. 

to get technical about it, he attended 4 hs but only played for 3 (maybe only suited up and didn't actually get on the field for one of them).  but yeah...what RJM said

Wow. So this forum has become nothing more than a platform for virtue signaling. Those posts probably don't put this forum in the best light. Maybe exhibit A when someone asks "300 guests and 6 members online. Why don't more post here?"

It’s how I see it. I don’t have any problem owning this post. I’ve been through the journey with two kids. None of the kids I coached were like this. But I saw and heard about plenty of them. I don’t recollect it ever ending well. The kid has character flaw flags all over him. Bailing on USC would just be another red flag.

Last edited by RJM

RJM.  Ever heard of a kid by the name Bryce Harper.  His parents rented him out every week from the time he was 12 to 18.  He was a pay to play kid.  People and SI called them crazy but I'm guessing IMO it worked out pretty good for him financially.  Still don't care for his antics on the field like I didn't at 12 but oh well.  I'm not saying it will work out for this kid but there are plenty out there that it worked out for.  I'm also willing to bet the apartment they live in is very cheap in Valdosta Georgia.  They are a powerhouse for the past 30 years.  When Nick Hyder was alive, they pulled the same things back in the 80's so it is the school not the coach.  They are known for doing whatever it takes to win. 

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