GT is one of the last holdout D1 schools that actually try to field a competitive team while maintaining academic integrity. I'd love to see a longitudinal study of former football players and how they end up in life after college. My guess is our guys fair way better than the norm.
The real question is does that even matter to most of the best prospects coming out of high school?
There was an expose a few years back that included some of Chan's players, how they ended up on the street after failing out or washing out of the program. This type of thing happens a lot more at the big factory programs, even to some of those who graduate (albeit with a worthless degree). It's my understanding that CPJ's players are treated better, as were Bobby Ross's. Most go on to get their degree. About 15 years ago, I saw a video of **** Vitale speaking to a large group of American high school basketball players who'd been invited to the McDonald's tournament. Virtually every one of those kids was going to a major college program; **** Vitale explained the hard truth to them that only a tiny fraction of these very talented athletes would ever get a shot at the NBA, that they should focus primarily on their education. It was amazing such visible personage as Mr. Vitale was there to stress the importance of a good college education to these kids... Wonder if anything like that happens in football...
I was talking with a recent Tech grad a few weeks ago, discussing the idea of doing what the Ivy League did a while back: Quitting the NCAA championship business altogether and fielding teams consisting of players exclusively from the regular student body, e.g. no recruiting, no althetic scholarships... Kids who were accepted to the school purely on academic merit would go and try out for the team, much like trying out for their high school team. We could form a league with schools like Vanderbilt and Duke, and maybe play the Ivy League in inter-conference play. It would give many Tech students the opportunity to play and not just sit in the stands cheering. The obvious downside to such a move would be to the scholarship athletes themselves. How many players at Tech alone have gotten to go college and get a great education all because of an athletic scholarship? It's a wonderful thing to see, and there's a part of me that would hate to see that all go away.
Because of demographics, the scholarship model may be here to stay. Many college players today tend to come from less affluent backgrounds, and with more upper-income parents opting for their kids to play soccer, this may continue to be the case. It wasn't always like that in the past. Our Pop Warner program was in a moderately affluent neighborhood. Hundreds and hundreds of these kids played football over a fifteen or twenty year period, and many went on to play at the next level for Chamblee, Peachtree, Dunwoody and Marist. A few of those guys from my general age group went on to play QB for Duke, play on the 1990 NC team at Tech, become an all-American at UGA and spend 13 seasons in the NFL, etc.
Oddly enough, it was the sons of the very wealthy who first played collegiate football, back when the Ivy League was all there was. These young men were slated to become the captains of industry or commanding officers in the military. How does a young kid going into a management position get the respect of the foreman of a steel mill, a 30-year veteran of the company? It was through football that these 'soft' scions of the wealthy gained respect and notoriety for being tough so that they would be able to occupy these great positions of responsibility upon graduation. This is one of the reasons why college football was first promoted. Not personally a big fan of these 'elite' dynastic families per se, but just an illustration of how different collegiate football was back then and what role it played in society. Teddy Roosevelt, who did much to make college football much safer (eliminating the so-called 'flying wedge' which regularly killed and seriously injured a number of players), was a proponent of tough physical sports like football, saying that it was necessary in toughening up a nation's young leaders.