coursesuper said:
in the late 80'sand early 90's many UM players went through there for one semester. The one I can think of the clearest now is Tim Bowens once went through there on his way into UM.
Yea, Bowens was a joke, but again, credit goes to Brewer for exploiting what was there.
You'll find I'm almost always on the side of the 'let them play' argument. I'm not one to pretend college football or basketball is about getting an education. Big time football and basketball is a business. I'd be for opening the doors and letting them all in, because I think it's ridiculous that we pretend you should have to go learn calculus to be able to play in the NFL or NBA. If you have the skill set, some avenue should be available for you to pursue that career. If colleges are going to basically make themselves the only legitimate avenue, then they need to drop the "student athlete" BS. Bowens is a great example of why I think the doors should be opened. He had no business in a college classroom, and I don't know if he ever really set foot in one, but he had plenty of business on an NFL football field. Without the loopholes being exploited, he may not have had that opportunity to showcase his skills and get to the NFL.
I'm getting way off topic though.
I was being dead serious when I was giving credit to Sherrill for exploiting those loopholes. And Orgeron did everything he could to exploit them as well. That's the best thing Orgeron ever did for both Ole Miss and MSU. Without him, you might not have the GamePlan program in place, and half of these in-state signees we're both going after would be Juco bound. Instead, a much higher percentage of them are on track than used to be. Mullen in particular should thank Orgeron whenever they cross paths given Mullen's heavy in-state recruiting strategy. That would be an awful dead end strategy if it weren't for GamePlan.