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Verbal commitment process needs change?

Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

Best advice I ever heard told to a recruit... 'Choose your school based on your intended major and the community of the campus. If you have a career ending injury in your first practice, is this the place you want to spend the next 4 years of your life?"
Without a doubt, and I've used that line myself. But I'm not prepared to say that should be the first consideration for everyone. Realistically, for many D1 recruits, their "intended major" is hockey, and they don't necessarily plan on spending the next four years of their life there. But as with mnstateOfhockey we agree on the general point.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

Too much ignorance on this thread and not enough time to respond to it all. :rolleyes:
 
Too much ignorance on this thread and not enough time to respond to it all. :rolleyes:

Like I told you on Twitter. I understand where you're coming from. I just have concerns about the effects this change would have and don't completely buy the motives.

Show me evidence that coaches at small programs are clamoring for this change and it will alleviate my concerns. So far, I haven't seen any.
 
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Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

The only way you're going to get change in the verbal commitment process is if you have a coach be "that guy" and poach players just before the NLI is signed, and then if he wins a NC, the process will be gone.
 
The only way you're going to get change in the verbal commitment process is if you have a coach be "that guy" and poach players just before the NLI is signed, and then if he wins a NC, the process will be gone.

That isn't possible under the current process. Changing the process by eliminating the agreement could make that very possible.
 
The only agreement that is binding is the NLI. Either that, or enrollment (including a security deposit).

The gentlemen's agreement that is being discussed, the agreement that this whole thread is dedicated to discussing, is an agreement between the coaches not to contact a player after he has verbally committed to another program.

So, under the current system where coaches have agreed to not contact players who have verbally committed to other programs, how are you suggesting that a coach will "poach" another program's recruit?

A kid may decommit and go elsewhere on his own, but I'd hardly classify that as poaching. I am seriously beginning to wonder if you understand the discussion at all.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

The gentlemen's agreement that is being discussed, the agreement that this whole thread is dedicated to discussing, is an agreement between the coaches not to contact a player after he has verbally committed to another program.

So, under the current system where coaches have agreed to not contact players who have verbally committed to other programs, how are you suggesting that a coach will "poach" another program's recruit?

A kid may decommit and go elsewhere on his own, but I'd hardly classify that as poaching. I am seriously beginning to wonder if you understand the discussion at all.

You say that coaches have "agreed" to not contact players who have verbally committed to other programs. I ask you, how is this or can this be enforced?
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

You say that coaches have "agreed" to not contact players who have verbally committed to other programs. I ask you, how is this or can this be enforced?

It isn't enforced.
It's a gentleman's agreement, it's done on honor.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

And what I'm saying is that all it will take is "that guy" to start poaching and subsequently making noise in the national tournament.

And so far, no one wants to be "that guy"
There is some honor among these coaches, it's too small a fraternity for there not to be.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

And so far, no one wants to be "that guy"
There is some honor among these coaches, it's too small a fraternity for there not to be.

I never said that there wasn't. You just never know what could happen with new outside influences.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

And what I'm saying is that all it will take is "that guy" to start poaching and subsequently making noise in the national tournament.

There's other things to consider... start doing that and you'll start burning your bridges... OOC scheduling gets difficult at best... so on so forth. It isn't done regularly because it isn't a tactic that comes without penalty.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

There's other things to consider... start doing that and you'll start burning your bridges... OOC scheduling gets difficult at best... so on so forth. It isn't done regularly because it isn't a tactic that comes without penalty.

Then they just start paying Atlantic teams for one-and-dones with all the money they're raking in. I know of a certain school that has experience with that... dont' want to name any names, but they have ugly helmets...
 
Then they just start paying Atlantic teams for one-and-dones with all the money they're raking in. I know of a certain school that has experience with that... dont' want to name any names, but they have ugly helmets...

Yeah, I don't think you quite get how this works. The social dance means a lot more than you think.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

According to the Colgate thread, we've started. WMU has grabbed a Colgate recruit. Although it's possible he de-committed.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

You're naive if you don't think this stuff already goes on to some extent. When kids are thinking of "decommitting", it usually isn't without some encouragement going on from a coach at another school that wants him. They just aren't as frontal about it as football and basketball coaches are.
 
Re: Verbal commitment process needs change?

Besides, the way things are now, it didn't stop a kid like Ryan Walters from decommitting from Minnesota and committing to UNO. It was his decision. A decision he made without coaches trying to pry him away from the Gophers. So, if kids don't like the situation they have committed to, they do have options right now to go elsewhere.

In all fairness, the Gopher coaching staff made it extremely difficult for Walters such that he was essentially driven to decommit. Apparently he was too much of an agitator and Hill tried to "encourage" him to tone it down.:rolleyes: Dumb.
 
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