"The Serious Misconduct Rule is defined as any act of sexual violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, sexual exploitation or any assault that employs the use of a deadly weapon or causes serious bodily injury. The rule will go into effect in the 2019-20 academic year."
As long as they focus on CONVICTED over accused/alleged (like the SEC appears to be doing) .. that's alright. I 100% agree with the above posters who state that playing is a privilege and I appreciate the effort to maintain high standards. (*cough* Luke Heimlich and Oregon State)
Time for some Devil's Advocate though.
For one, different states report and classify crimes in different ways. Context is also super important. Wasn't there an SEC player in the last few years who had a domestic violence conviction or something but he was fighting his abusive dad?
In addition, I certainly don't think folks with
serious misconduct issues should be taken lightly (perhaps they could be on some sort of 'double secret probation'

) but I do think such a rule could prevent young people who come from shitty backgrounds from actually turning things around. If the kid was convicted and has served their time and keeps their nose clean, why should they be barred from the sport and what message are we sending them? Obviously they can turn their lives around without the use of sport, and to play at all is purely a privilege, but should we be barring them outright? (I don't presume to know and obviously this is a case-by-case situation; see the aforementioned Luke Heimlich after they found out what he did)
Lastly (whew), why is this a conference thing? Why is the Big Sky dictating how individual schools conduct their business? I understand that they want to promote conference-wide excellence and that one blemish can make the whole group look bad but shouldn't this be on a university by university basis? If one school wants to take the risk of fallout re: student safety, accreditation, bad press, etc. by giving a kid with a conviction a shot, that's on them. At the end of the day no one remembers the conference; they remember the individual school who fucked up. See: Penn State, SMU, Michigan State, etc. It's them who suffer the consequences, not the conference.
Like, I respect the effort on behalf of the Big Sky to address a major concern in CFB and I think that striving for excellence is important, but at the same time, I wonder if this particular thing will hurt more than help.