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View Full Version : Mitch Ablum on Recruiting-To some degree, gotta agree with him



Rockie
02-08-2009, 08:35 AM
MITCH ALBOM
Hey, it's high school -- not the Super Bowl
BY MITCH ALBOM • FREE PRESS COLUMNIST • February 8, 2009

It is wrong and harmful and we should all be ashamed of ourselves and I guess I'm going to keep writing it until I'm the last person in this business saying it. This glorifying of high school recruits has got to stop.


Last week was Signing Day for college football, which used to be a date known only to coaches. Today, it is cause for endless TV coverage, mountains of newsprint and an Internet gone wild.

What's changed? Nothing and everything.

The nothing part is that a high school kid picks a college.

The everything is everything else.

First, there's the theatricality of it all. High school athletes now take over an auditorium or a cafeteria -- often during school hours -- and play a coy little game with a bunch of hats while reporters record every pathetic minute. Will he pick the LSU hat? The USC hat? The Michigan hat?

The recruit usually is surrounded by an entourage of family, friends, the girlfriend of the moment and some future hangers-on. He finally picks a hat and crowns himself with it and -- ta-da! -- the news wires burn and the bloggers hyperventilate.

Never mind that many of these top 100 kids won't even be factors four years from now. Never mind that there is no such thing as a sure thing in college football.

That doesn't stop the glamorizing, analyzing, interviewing and, of course, the ranking of which school did the best, orchestrated by tout services and magazines that created this whole false fury in the first place.

A star system run amok
A few examples of what this hype machine produced last week:

A linebacker from Hawaii named Manti Te'o made his announcement to much fanfare. He chose Notre Dame. The reason?

"Their recruiting coordinator, Brian Polian, flew here every week from South Bend," T'eo told the Honolulu Advertiser, "and that just shows me his determination and dedication."

Really? It shows me Notre Dame has enough money to send a man commuting to Hawaii week after week at a time when many families can't afford to pay tuition. How about taking that airfare and giving it instead to a need-based scholarship? What's that? But then you won't have Te'o making tackles next fall?

Well, the kid is a Mormon and says he may leave after his freshman year to go on a mission.

I wonder if airlines do refunds.

Then there was a defensive back named Craig Loston, out of Houston, who picked LSU. His Eisenhower High coach was excited. Funny thing is, Loston doesn't even attend school anymore. According to the coach, the kid lives in Louisiana. According to the principal, the kid says he's taking online classes to finish his requirements. Online?

How about a Texas safety named Colton Valencia, who brought four hats to his news conference, then, for drama, ignored them and pulled out a Texas A&M hat from under the table. What's next? A rabbit?

Only once in my career did I attend a recruiting announcement. It was for Robert (Tractor) Traylor, a prep basketball star in Detroit who did the TV/entourage thing, chose the University of Michigan, and later became part of a recruiting scandal that led to his coach's firing and the school's NCAA probation.

I lasted five minutes at his event, left, went to the school library, and found a kid going to the same university on an academic scholarship, all alone, doing homework.

Don't play follow the leader
The editors and writers in our business should, in my view, do the same thing. Walk away. Ignore this hype. Report the details and that's it. Who cares if the Internet burns with this stuff? The Internet burns with porn -- we don't print that.

Who cares if these tout services and magazines sell a lot of copies? Are we here to mirror another business' panderings? If so, why don't we have centerfolds every day? Or is that next?

Don't we realize how we're hurting these kids? With recruiting mania, we increase pressure, expectations, egos and temptations to cheat -- so much so that last year, you recall, a kid made up an entire news conference, phony selection, phony everything, just so he could be part of the hype.

That should have been our wake-up call. Instead, Signing Day was bigger than ever. We talk as if education matters, but we act as if nothing could be more important than which 17-year-old kid -- still taking high school English classes -- will hike the ball at some college next year.

Until we learn, they never will.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or malbom@freepress.com.

Inflames
02-08-2009, 08:49 AM
Oh good Lord Mitch.... He has no problem writing about the situation. Once again the high and mighty Mitch Albom swoops in to tell us to be ashamed over our behavior. This is the same guy that compared Darren McCarty fighting Claude Limuix on the ice with street gang violence.

Not a fan of MH. I think he tries too hard to make something dramatic out of things as simple as being excited over the kids coming in that can help win. I understand these are high school kids but does he understand that this is also just a game? There is no reason to check our moral compass on this matter.

GoDeepHammer
02-08-2009, 10:15 AM
I think that Mitch is no better then what he is condemning. But, I agree that recruiting is now over the top and getting worse. I don't mind the interviews and the star system, but why do they have the televised commitments? Let them commit and post it on Rivals or Scouts and go from there. It has become a circus with the recruiting game.

joeismyname
02-08-2009, 10:29 AM
I usually think Albom is a huge douche, but he actually makes a lot of good points here. These kids have young minds and if we push all kinds of media and praise toward them, many of them will become selfish and arrogant human beings just because they are yet to experience the real world and how it really treats them. The last thing I want to see in the game of football is another Terrell Owens, Chad Johnson, etc, etc... who just think that they are God's gift the Sport and to the world. Think about all the over-hyped ego-driven players that enter the NFL draft and then become a huge busts and sometimes just a failure at life(Ryan Leaf Anyone?), or those who find success in the NFL after a humble college career and become obsessed with themselves over their media attention (TO, Chad Johnson, and im just gonna predict James Harrison). This isn't good for anyone, especially a 17 or 18 year old kid. Do you really want these kind of players polluting the humbleness and work ethic of the college game? I don't.

bigboyBlue
02-08-2009, 11:18 AM
All true, but I don't see it changing anytime. As someone said here, the fun part of being able to follow recruiting by the minute is that it makes college football a year-round activity for fans, which many of us crave. The other reason is that it has become evident that recruiting well wins games, so there is a huge interest in getting the stud recruits, plus it makes for great drama (e.g. Pryor sweepstakes last year).

Obviously it is the student athlete who gets the inflated ego, but I don't really have a problem with it; most of these kids will end up in non-ath careers, let them have a moment, they've probably done well enough on the field to deserve some attention. Its like when you apply for a job, and everyone tells you you're the shit, you're so good, how much you would contribute, what a pleasure it was to interview you yada yada.....come first day at work, its eff you, get to it :).

tpilews
02-08-2009, 11:23 AM
I think everyone is making valid points. I don't mind the athletes getting attention in the newspapers, radio, and internet. But, the tv stuff has got to stop. Announcing on tv, kids make it a laughing stock. Pull this hat, no, that hat, STUPID!!! And stop interviewing the players. Most of them really need to be in an English class, or public speaking class. It's dreadful listening to them stringing words together and failing to put a sentence together. You want an example, go listen to Duron Carter, I swear the kid has got some problems going on upstairs.

I'm fine with ESPN doing their NLOI coverage, but stop with the interviews and live announcements.

rickyleach
02-08-2009, 01:07 PM
Iflames , i grew up in the detroit area , and i second that, i have never liked mitch im so cool ablum. He has always been self serving.. What he says doesnt mean ssshit..

bleed maize & blue
02-08-2009, 02:31 PM
I agree with the whole national signing day being blown way out of proportion.....Also the fact that most of these kids will get chewed up and spit out after 4 years with no degree and no future.

Revelli
02-08-2009, 04:51 PM
I usually think Albom is a huge douche, but he actually makes a lot of good points here. These kids have young minds and if we push all kinds of media and praise toward them, many of them will become selfish and arrogant human beings just because they are yet to experience the real world and how it really treats them. The last thing I want to see in the game of football is another Terrell Owens, Chad Johnson, etc, etc... who just think that they are God's gift the Sport and to the world. Think about all the over-hyped ego-driven players that enter the NFL draft and then become a huge busts and sometimes just a failure at life(Ryan Leaf Anyone?), or those who find success in the NFL after a humble college career and become obsessed with themselves over their media attention (TO, Chad Johnson, and im just gonna predict James Harrison). This isn't good for anyone, especially a 17 or 18 year old kid. Do you really want these kind of players polluting the humbleness and work ethic of the college game? I don't.


I'm with you, man. I met the D-bag when I was in college and working at Barnes and Noble, while he was doing his "Tuesdays with Morrie" book signings. I've never met anyone so high on themselves in my life.

That being said, for once I completely agree with him. These guys ego's are getting too inflated and it's effecting the level of their play at the college level... ie. Too much ego, not enough work ethic.

RealSchool
02-08-2009, 09:39 PM
Am I the only one that remembers Chris Webber back in 8th grade saying he was going to MSU after being pushed by reporters to name a school? This crap has been going forever.

BBA1994
02-09-2009, 09:05 AM
I just have one question in regard to Mitch Albom and if anyone can answer it I think we would all appreciate it.

WTF is with his ears? Does he have some elephantitis of the ear that we all should know about?

He came to my high school to speak to our journalism class and for the last 20 years this has been on my mind. Somebody please clear it up for us.

number2
02-11-2009, 10:28 AM
MITCH ALBOM
Hey, it's high school -- not the Super Bowl
BY MITCH ALBOM • FREE PRESS COLUMNIST • February 8, 2009

It is wrong and harmful and we should all be ashamed of ourselves and I guess I'm going to keep writing it until I'm the last person in this business saying it. This glorifying of high school recruits has got to stop.


Last week was Signing Day for college football, which used to be a date known only to coaches. Today, it is cause for endless TV coverage, mountains of newsprint and an Internet gone wild.

What's changed? Nothing and everything.

The nothing part is that a high school kid picks a college.

The everything is everything else.

First, there's the theatricality of it all. High school athletes now take over an auditorium or a cafeteria -- often during school hours -- and play a coy little game with a bunch of hats while reporters record every pathetic minute. Will he pick the LSU hat? The USC hat? The Michigan hat?

The recruit usually is surrounded by an entourage of family, friends, the girlfriend of the moment and some future hangers-on. He finally picks a hat and crowns himself with it and -- ta-da! -- the news wires burn and the bloggers hyperventilate.

Never mind that many of these top 100 kids won't even be factors four years from now. Never mind that there is no such thing as a sure thing in college football.

That doesn't stop the glamorizing, analyzing, interviewing and, of course, the ranking of which school did the best, orchestrated by tout services and magazines that created this whole false fury in the first place.

A star system run amok
A few examples of what this hype machine produced last week:

A linebacker from Hawaii named Manti Te'o made his announcement to much fanfare. He chose Notre Dame. The reason?

"Their recruiting coordinator, Brian Polian, flew here every week from South Bend," T'eo told the Honolulu Advertiser, "and that just shows me his determination and dedication."

Really? It shows me Notre Dame has enough money to send a man commuting to Hawaii week after week at a time when many families can't afford to pay tuition. How about taking that airfare and giving it instead to a need-based scholarship? What's that? But then you won't have Te'o making tackles next fall?

Well, the kid is a Mormon and says he may leave after his freshman year to go on a mission.

I wonder if airlines do refunds.

Then there was a defensive back named Craig Loston, out of Houston, who picked LSU. His Eisenhower High coach was excited. Funny thing is, Loston doesn't even attend school anymore. According to the coach, the kid lives in Louisiana. According to the principal, the kid says he's taking online classes to finish his requirements. Online?

How about a Texas safety named Colton Valencia, who brought four hats to his news conference, then, for drama, ignored them and pulled out a Texas A&M hat from under the table. What's next? A rabbit?

Only once in my career did I attend a recruiting announcement. It was for Robert (Tractor) Traylor, a prep basketball star in Detroit who did the TV/entourage thing, chose the University of Michigan, and later became part of a recruiting scandal that led to his coach's firing and the school's NCAA probation.

I lasted five minutes at his event, left, went to the school library, and found a kid going to the same university on an academic scholarship, all alone, doing homework.

Don't play follow the leader
The editors and writers in our business should, in my view, do the same thing. Walk away. Ignore this hype. Report the details and that's it. Who cares if the Internet burns with this stuff? The Internet burns with porn -- we don't print that.

Who cares if these tout services and magazines sell a lot of copies? Are we here to mirror another business' panderings? If so, why don't we have centerfolds every day? Or is that next?

Don't we realize how we're hurting these kids? With recruiting mania, we increase pressure, expectations, egos and temptations to cheat -- so much so that last year, you recall, a kid made up an entire news conference, phony selection, phony everything, just so he could be part of the hype.

That should have been our wake-up call. Instead, Signing Day was bigger than ever. We talk as if education matters, but we act as if nothing could be more important than which 17-year-old kid -- still taking high school English classes -- will hike the ball at some college next year.

Until we learn, they never will.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or malbom@freepress.com.

I think he's right...though I get caught up in all this recruiting as well (because Im starved for college football already) he is right...these guys should not get this much attention...and it was my point from last year during Pryors recruitment...in years past I had no idea which guys were coming in...I just knew they were coming...Michigan always had a guy to step in whether it was at QB, CB, O/D Line, etc...its gotten crazy in just the last few years...