
Beating the systemWith texting outlawed, coaches turn to e-mail; notesPosted: Monday January 14, 2008 1:34PM; Updated: Monday January 14, 2008 2:06PM
Gr8, nw cntctng rcrts wl tk 4eva. A few tech-savvy college football coaches probably fired off a text similar to the one above (Great, now contacting recruits will take forever) on Saturday afternoon when they learned -- possibly by text message -- that the NCAA had upheld its ban on texting recruits. An override vote, originally spearheaded by the American Football Coaches Association, barely made it to the floor at the NCAA Convention in Nashville, Tenn. When the issue finally came up for a vote, only 21.3 percent of Division I members supported the override. So what's a coach to do? A year ago, coaches still could only call once a week, but they could text to their hearts' content. And what did many of those text messages say? "Call me." But with their BlackBerrys holstered since Aug. 1, how do coaches get their message to recruits? Tyler Love, a Birmingham, Ala., offensive tackle who has committed to Alabama, said after the ban, he noticed e-mail from coaches came more steadily. Love said he does not get e-mail on his mobile phone, but teammates and friends who do seem to get e-mails regularly from coaches. That may ultimately be the simplest solution as well as the target of the next piece of NCAA legislation. Coaches may gently suggest to recruits that instead of upgrading their mobile plan to include unlimited text, they upgrade to unlimited data. The NCAA allows unlimited e-mail contact, and to a recruit with a Sidekick and a souped-up plan, a text and an e-mail look essentially the same (though it would be far more entertaining to learn whether Texas coach Mack Brown or USC coach Pete Carroll uses the phrase "LOL" to save space in a 160-character text). For coaches and their flying thumbs of fury, sending an e-mail might be easier than sending a text. On a BlackBerry it takes one fewer click to send an e-mail than a text. Zebrie Sanders, a Dayton, Ohio, offensive tackle, has noticed another ploy. "[Coaches will] just tell one of their players to text me," Sanders said. Players exchange numbers all the time at combines, camps and on official visits. If the NCAA ever asked about the practice, a coach could say the player acted on his own, hoping to lure a quality teammate. Sanders said coaches also will use a legal, low-tech method. During their weekly, NCAA-permitted call, they will remind players to call in at regular intervals. The NCAA places no limit on the number of times a recruit may call a coach. The ban may also force players to be more proactive. After getting caught in a scholarship crunch that squeezed him out of Florida's class, Sanders is looking at several other schools. He likes Georgia, but he also may check out Florida State, UCLA and possibly Miami. Sunday, he said he planned to call a Miami coach after his telephone interview with SI.com. A player in Sanders' position may have to make a few more calls to gauge programs' interest. Before, he could simply count the texts. So is the ban a good thing? Coaches argue that it wasn't the text messages that helped build relationships, it was the phone calls those messages facilitated. Every year, coaches complain that the NCAA allows them less and less time to learn who they're recruiting. More contact, coaches argue, would help them discern who truly wants to win championships, who can handle the rigors of college life and who might get into trouble. Of course, coaches also could help by not accepting commitments 11 months before signing day, but why police themselves when they could blame the NCAA?
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