Originally posted by SubGod22
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Grayson Allen 6-4 g Class of 2014, Offered
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by 1979Shocker View PostCouldn't you get a school you didn't like in trouble by acting like you're a fan of that school and asking a potential recruit to come to that school even though you're really not a fan?
but damn is it a little creepy twitter stalking these kids
Comment
-
Couple of thoughts on the social media issue:
1. I wouldn't do it. Even if it is unlikely to be penalized and everyone else is doing it, I would rather let the coaches handle recruiting and avoid any possible violations.
2. For some of the reasons noted above, the NCAA needs to change the rules on this. I understand the rules existing to keep boosters from gaining advantage for their schools through special access to players, but social media doesn't really fit into that mold. Every school is on level footing with fans having access to Twitter, and the public nature of social media actually provides more transparency into the system than most forms of potential booster/prospect interaction. I would argue that anything that fans can do on a public section of a social media site (i.e. not private messages or being "friends" with a recruit without an actual relationship) should be fine and only penalized if the content of the message exposes other impermissible benefits.
In practice, I think this is pretty much how the NCAA is approaching this issue, but they should officially change their rules to make it clear what is and is not fine if they have no plans to prosecute this kind of interaction."Cotton scared me - I left him alone." - B4MSU (Bear Nation poster) in reference to heckling players
Comment
-
Originally posted by The Mad Hatter View PostCouple of thoughts on the social media issue:
1. I wouldn't do it. Even if it is unlikely to be penalized and everyone else is doing it, I would rather let the coaches handle recruiting and avoid any possible violations.
2. For some of the reasons noted above, the NCAA needs to change the rules on this. I understand the rules existing to keep boosters from gaining advantage for their schools through special access to players, but social media doesn't really fit into that mold. Every school is on level footing with fans having access to Twitter, and the public nature of social media actually provides more transparency into the system than most forms of potential booster/prospect interaction. I would argue that anything that fans can do on a public section of a social media site (i.e. not private messages or being "friends" with a recruit without an actual relationship) should be fine and only penalized if the content of the message exposes other impermissible benefits.
In practice, I think this is pretty much how the NCAA is approaching this issue, but they should officially change their rules to make it clear what is and is not fine if they have no plans to prosecute this kind of interaction.You miss 100% of the shots you don't take....
.....but, statistically speaking, you miss 99% of the shots you do take.
Comment
-
From ESPN:
"Duke received its first commitment in the Class of 2014 on Wednesday when ESPN 60 shooting guard Grayson Allen (Jacksonville, Fla./Providence School), the No. 36-ranked junior in the country, pledged to the Blue Devils.""Prediction is very difficult, especially if it is about the future."
--Niels Bohr
Comment
Comment