Many coaches, especially coordinators, change jobs after a signing class is delivered. Kids going to a school suddenly are committed to schools that they would not have gone to if they had known all the facts. One main reason Auburn was mad at Chizek was he left before signing day, and there was fear it would cost us recruits. The kids deserve better than that. It is amazing that more of the prime prospects don't use scholarship agreements rather than the LOI. In this day of easy information I am surprised this hasn't caught on.
http://cbs.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/6170293
What's laughable is it doesn't have to be that way. The coaches, the schools, the recruiting services and the fans have basically
created national signing day.
"That's funny you said that," said Eugene Byrd, director of the National Letter of Intent program. "There's even a place on our website where it says you don't have to sign a letter of intent, you can use this scholarship agreement."
Administrators are amazed an alternative, the scholarship agreement, isn't utilized more. After the football signing period ends (this year it's April 1), a scholarship agreement is basically a yearly promise from a school it will provide X amount of books, board and tuition if a prospect comes to that school.
Read between the lines. If Wednesday means tying yourself up to a school for four to five years, then the scholarship agreement means freedom. Even if the kid signs a scholarship agreement, he still can go to any school he wants before next fall without penalty
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