You are making my argument for me. Really and truly THINK about what you just said. "Most of the players who played for Bobby Ross AND STAYED ELIGIBLE WHILE DOING THE WORK AT GT couldn't get in today." Yeah, that makes a LOT of sense. </sarcasm>
And your comment about them taking remedial classes the entire time to stay eligible simply isn't true. I know a good many of those players. You can make assumptions and claims, but please present us with the actual cases of where this happened.
Again, why in the hell does the APR matter to the Hill? It doesn't affect their jobs one way or the other, but it does affect the head coach's job.
And, let's get the facts straight about Flunkgate & the NCAA probations because they were 2 separate incidences:
Flunkgate - was a failure, pure & simple, on the part of Chan Gailey and his staff for not putting more measures in place to make sure players were going to class and attending study halls. But, even though we had those players fail out...that somehow reflects NEGATIVELY on the academic side of GT? Are you serious? The very same institution which told us in my freshman orientation class: "Look to your left. Now look to your right. One of those people will not be here this time next year." So this is somehow a negative when some football players fail out? Mr. Pot, meet Mr. Kettle.
NCAA Probations -- caused by a crotchedy old fart (Frank Roper) in the GTAA who was in charge of our compliance and who, by his own admission, didn't regularly attend the NCAA MANDATED compliance meetings for 5 - 10 years because he was getting ready to retire and just didn't give a crap. And the NCAA probations happened because the rules had changed and there was now a bylaw stating that if your school had academic standards higher than those of the NCAA, you had to be current by your school's standards to still be eligible. Prior to that, as long as you were eligible by NCAA standards, you were ok. Well, we had some students who were eligible by NCAA standards but not those of GT...they played in games...and Tech was later held responsible for them.
For corroboration, see this link:
http://blogs.ajc.com/georgia-tech-s...nt-replay-techs-take-on-their-2005-probation/
So now both of these are the foundation on which you lay your "we need to make things more difficult to maintain our academic integrity" argument? That's a crock.
And one final thought: I had an interesting conversation over dinner with Darryl Smith (yeah, that DS...the linebacker in the pros) one night. He told me that he was admitted to GT and that he wasn't prepared for the work there. He didn't think that the education he received in Albany, GA adequately prepared him for the work. But he said WTTE of , "I decided that I was going to do as well in the classroom as I did on the field. And the academic support staff we had there at the time was great. They basically taught me remedial work and then my coursework for me to be able to catch up. I take great pride in the work I did in the classroom at Tech. It's a damn shame that neither me nor a lot of my teammates who ended up doing well in classes wouldn't even be able to get into Tech by today's standards. They'll kill the football program because they think they know who can cut it at Tech and who cannot. But you can't tell that because you don't know who's really willing to do the work and who's not."