SEC chief: Rules package flawed

SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey isn’t a fan of a new package of football recruiting rules that is being looked at by the NCAA’s Board of Governors after making his concerns known during a regional meeting of Associated Press Sports Editors on Monday in Birmingham, Ala.
SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey isn’t a fan of a new package of football recruiting rules that is being looked at by the NCAA’s Board of Governors after making his concerns known during a regional meeting of Associated Press Sports Editors on Monday in Birmingham, Ala.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- SEC Greg Sankey said the new package of football recruiting rules being considered by the NCAA's Board of Governors needs to be reviewed further.

Speaking to an Associated Press Sports Editors Southeast regional meeting Monday, Sankey voiced concerns with the timeline for early campus visits by high school juniors and the 25-player football signing cap.

"Those two pieces, I don't view as healthy," Sankey said during a question-and-answer session.

The Board of Governors will consider Wednesday a sweeping package approved by the NCAA's Division I Council. The changes would allow high school players to sign with schools as early as December, doing away with two-a-day practices and letting high school juniors take official visits from April through June.

Bowl Subdivision schools would also be limited to signing 25 prospective or current players to a first-time financial aid agreement or a National Letter of Intent, with exceptions for current players who have been enrolled full-time at the school for at least two years and those who suffer an incapacitating injury

Sankey said the league, which already has a signing limit for member programs, wanted to expand the time range for counting scholarships toward the current class.

"What's called a hard cap on signing, I don't think that accomplishes what it's intended to accomplish," he said. "I think what it's going to do is remove some opportunities that should exist. So somebody signs, isn't eligible for some reason, the school is prohibited from replacing that scholarship with someone new, an initial counter. "

Sankey cited a member of the student leadership council when asking why schools would want recruits making official visits outside of the regular academic schedule.

He said the SEC proposed an amendment that would have permitted them just in April.

"But the idea of bringing young people to visit a campus when you're not having regular campus life is not a direction we would support," Sankey said.

Overall, Sankey said package is a mixed bag, one that requires more study.

"Hopefully they will be subject to further review sooner rather than later," Sankey said of the proposed legislation. "But through every piece of that, I am absolutely certain our schools will continue to recruit successfully at the highest level of college football. There's been nothing to indicate otherwise."

Sports on 04/25/2017

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