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And we've had even more kids who stuck around contributing nothing other than taking up a scholly. Explain that.
I wouldn't play dirty for only 9+ wins. Maybe 10.5+. But we'd still end up as 7+ win team, no matter how filthy we got.
It's also not the Math 101 that football players at most schools take, where they learn how to draw graphs and solve basic algebraic equations.
many schools need their sports to be exceptional to even be talked about in a national forum. some schools are good schools. Georgia Tech is in the latter, better category.
...taking pay decreases if not actually losing their jobs because their alma mater winning 9 football games a year has devalued their degree.
The difference is that schools like Clemson, or Florida State, or Alabama don't care about the national stage. Those schools view their mission as serving their local community as best as possible. Creating a college where 95% of the local community can't attend or wouldn't pass if they attended is contradictory to that mission.
Actually, Clemson has made a huge push over the last 10 or so years to put themselves on a national stage. It has worked in terms of putting the school into the top 20 public universities, but there has definitely been a negative reaction from many locals because the school has become pretty tough for your average South Carolinian to get into.
IMO the bigger difference is diversity of degree offerings. Sure, it allows players who don't care about school to hide in joke classes, but it also allows room for those who are academically inclined but don't want a math or business degree. I've probably posted this 10 times on here, but I don't understand why Tech doesn't offer a STEM teaching degree. As shitty as our math and science teaching is at the high school level, we could use some help from the elite universities. As a side effect, I could definitely see this attracting some athletes that we might not otherwise get.
Depends on how you define dirty I believe.
There's a huge lack of supply of hs physics teachers in the us, especially in FL. It results in fewer and fewer highschoolers taking physics, I think in FL it's under 20%.
Part of the problem is salary competition. Anybody with a Physics degree can make a ton more money doing something else.
Also, the fact that Ga State has a huge Education department doesn't exactly force the hand of the BoR even though it's not specialized to STEM teaching. You'd have to create an entire department of education at GT because teaching is so much more than knowing the subject. I teach Middle School Science and only a small fraction of my education course load involved subject knowledge.
What a stupid nerdtastic notion. What would Coach Dodd have to say? End of argument. How stupid.
We went to the Orange Bowl in 09 by breaking the rules. It works. :wink:
I hate to tell all you folks but it isn't 1955 anymore. What Coach Dodd would or wouldn't do has little bearing.
I assure you, admission standards today are far tougher than they were when Dodd was coaching.