Posted 6 hours ago6 hr No. I know this is par for the course in our new Transfer Portal / NIL world, but I still don't have to like it.It's like two people getting engaged and one of them saying, "I'm committed to you, but I'm going to check out 'Name', 'Name', and 'Name' over the next few weekends to see if they have anything to offer that might change my mind . . . But still, so excited. Love ya!!"Unfortunately, it makes recruiting not worth following. I'll tune in at the end of signing day to see what happened, but don't bother me in the meantime.Oregon Ducks On SIOregon Ducks in Danger of Losing Five-Star Recruit to LSU...The Oregon Ducks are playing like arguably the best team in the country through the first three weeks of the college football season, as the program appears pri
5 hours ago5 hr No. A commitment means absolutely nothing in recruiting. Sure it might increase your odds but I don’t get excited about a recruit until Oregon receives their signed LOI, and even then we’ve seen kids back out or transfer to another school.
5 hours ago5 hr Moderator No. Verbal commitment = a verbal contract that gives leverage to negotiate higher NIL money with other suitors. While money isn’t everything, it certainly looks good in the savings account.
5 hours ago5 hr No. Remember, these are teenagers making their first big life decision for recruiting. Then for the Transfer Portal, there are many reasons to change teams. Should somebody stay at a job that isn't the right fit for them? Don't get me wrong, there are probably many players just frustrated they expected something different. Some are willing to struggle, most want the "easy" path.
4 hours ago4 hr Moderator No. You'll need to board the Soul Train to ask these folks the C(ommitment) Question -Zsa Zsa Gabor - 9 marraiges. 🤪Only eight for - Liz Taylor, Lana Turner, and Mickey Rooney.Rooney's bank account got shorter after every divorce. 🤑
3 hours ago3 hr Author No. 1 hour ago, Tandaian said:Remember, these are teenagers making their first big life decision for recruiting. Then for the Transfer Portal, there are many reasons to change teams. Should somebody stay at a job that isn't the right fit for them?Don't get me wrong, there are probably many players just frustrated they expected something different. Some are willing to struggle, most want the "easy" path.I understand the transfer portal side a little more.For example, it would make complete sense to me if Austin Novosad decided he'd been loyal long enough to the Ducks and decided he actually wanted to play QB, and entered the portal.What I have trouble with are high schoolers that haven't even practiced/suited up for the job that, after committing to a school, say they're going to keep checking other places. I have no problem with the fact they're high schoolers making the first major decision in their life, but finish the decision making process before committing.If I'm not mistaken, both of the recruits on "flip watch" (Tank and Iheanacho) took valuable air time on The Pat McAfee Show to tell the world where they committed . . . to then immediately go on other school visits.My recommendation is get all those other visits out of the way first, then commit.
3 hours ago3 hr Moderator No. 22 minutes ago, WTD25 said:then commitThe underbelly is the fact that a school may hint after you commit that maybe you'd be better off somewhere else when they recruit over you. This is a side that we do not hear about.
2 hours ago2 hr Moderator No. Then again, maybe it is mutual . . .I swore I would love you to the end of time!So now I'm praying for the end of timeTo hurry up and arrive'Cause if I gotta spend another minute with youI don't think that I can really surviveI'll never break my promise or forget my vowBut God only knows what I can do right nowI'm praying for the end of time, it's all that I can doPraying for the end of time so I can end my time with you!
1 hour ago1 hr Moderator No. 57 minutes ago, Steven A said:The underbelly is the fact that a school may hint after you commit that maybe you'd be better off somewhere else when they recruit over you. This is a side that we do not hear about.There's method to the decommitment game. Find out what you're worth at Program O, a program with sound NIL management, and then put yourself out for bid.How many flips are up to the recruit compared to his parents and agent? Probably not that many.You could pay a recruit a signing bonus and have him sign a contract, but a program, Miami, for instance, will ignore the deal until the agreement passes muster in court. To date, the key OBD stat for me is that OBD has not lost a starter to the transfer portal. I trust Dan and company to fill holes from the portal. You're more likely to pay the correct salary to a guy who has played college ball and whose play at the college level is not a complete guess.Folks market their skills all the time. This is how Head Hunters, a/k/a business recruiting concerns, make their money. And Head Hunters have been known to tamper with a company's roster on occassion. 😁Without an agreement with a players union there will be no surcease of players trying to earn all they can as soon as they can; especially, when you can put yourself up for auction season after season. Imagine what the NFL would look and what players would be paid without fines for exceeding a salary cap, and with no restraint on free agency and tampering. In other words, today's CFB.Before December's signing day, I simply ignore recruiting and the falaciously referred to 'commitments.'
1 hour ago1 hr No. Commitment regarding recruiting has become a leverage tool. Many players are just looking for the largest "paycheck", believing their raw talent will carry them on through to the pros. Many are looking to get paid, but value development beyond what their talent alone allows. Many want to "be" somewhere that they feel they "belong". Many want the "high profile" program to get the most media (traditional and social) attention. Then, many know and Are committed to a program, but why give up all that free "swag" and "courting" by other programs if they "truly" believed you where committed.Being "committed" says to any program that, I believe I have found the place that best meets my needs, whatever those personally are to the individual recruit. Challenging other interested parties to prove them wrong.I believe Lanning and Co. know this. I believe Division St. knows this. I believe most recruits (and their advisors) know this.So like many have already posted. Following recruiting is fun and all. But absolutely no one or nothing to get "excited" about until pen hits paper...and then sometimes not even then...transfer portal and all.Remind me? Didn't we have a 5* recruit who wAs "committed" until days before signing day where he went...elsewhere. BUT, now back where he originally "committed" to and BTW is going to tear up "Happy Valley" in a couple days???😉GO DUCKS!
43 minutes ago43 min Moderator No. 1 hour ago, Jon Joseph said:Before December's signing day, I simply ignore recruitingWords to live by.
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