Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Florida's president gives anti-oversigning movement official bite

Today, they welcome the first member to the club of outspoken oversigning critics who can actually do something about it, Florida president Bernie Machen, who opened up with both barrels for Sports Illustrated on teams that renege on their promise when the scholarship numbers don't add up. In Division I college football this practice is known as "grayshirting" and, unfortunately, there are universities that sanction this activity. The universities, with full knowledge of what they are doing, extend more athletic scholarships than they have. These schools play roulette with the lives of talented young people. If they run out of scholarships, too bad. The letter-of-intent signed by the university the previous February is voided. Technically, it's legal to do this. Morally, it is reprehensible. No university would allow this for the general student body. Imagine the uproar it would cause! What needs to happen in intercollegiate athletics is that universities must accept the moral responsibility to stop and prevent "grayshirting" and its associated actions. The football programs must be accountable and should honor institutional commitments to students. It is, after all, a moral contract.

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