Well, we'll see if Wofford continues to do it. I wonder if there's something else going on too though, even with the more highly sought-after players Furman lands. Given the program's FCS status and mixed results in recent years, I would imagine that the school itself is getting sold way, way more than the actual football program (and rightly so). But maybe the average Furman player has football lower on their priority list (even if they play as hard as they can during games). And even if it's not lower on the priority list, Furman student athletes have to put more effort into actual school than at most places.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Mon Mar 22, 2021 6:29 amI think I pretty much agree with you. If it isn’t coaching, what do you think is the mysterious force that keeps us plateaued right about where we are no matter who is coaching? My theory (and it’s just a theory) is that the admissions office is holding us back.
I think it was you who posted earlier wondering if the demographics of HS football are changing. They are where I am. The Furman kind of kid doesn’t play (at least not in large numbers). They either play travel baseball, travel soccer or, in the vast majority of cases, nothing at all. The smart kid football star is living in a seller’s market. It’s hard to get enough legit ones to fill a roster. But how does WC do it? They’ve adjusted their requirements. That’s how.
That would also tie in with the demographic shifts and the massively increased cost of attendance (not that a full scholarship player is directly impacted per se - but it surely has indirect effects through the way HS students look at their options). The decline of SoCon football is undoubtedly a factor as well. And these trends have been occurring in parallel. The timelines seem to match up pretty well.
High school football participation (adjusted for HS population) peaked in the late 90s. I suspect that the football budget (relative to other FCS programs) started to decline around then as well, though that's a wild guess. Furman tuition started spiking in the late aughts. The FCS-era SoCon technically peaked in the 1980s but at least its best teams were nationally competitive until the early 2010s.