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CECIL HURT: Rece Davis sees a season of change as 2019 football approaches | TideSports.com
Technically speaking, Rece Davis is not one of college footballās Founding Fathers. Despite the fact that he resides in New England these days, Davis is too young to play that part and has never worn a powdered wig in his life. On the other hand, Davis, the well-respected host of ESPNās College...
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Technically speaking, Rece Davis is not one of college footballās Founding Fathers. Despite the fact that he resides in New England these days, Davis is too young to play that part and has never worn a powdered wig in his life.
On the other hand, Davis, the well-respected host of ESPNās College Gameday, the Saturday morning prelude to autumn afternoons and the primer for a huge audience on the major stories of the week, carried a certain gravitas. He steers a middle course on almost all stories and while the fact that he attended Alabama rankles a few fiery fans of other constituencies and conferences, heās probably as close as the sport comes to having an honest broker these days.
So when we had a preseason telephone chat on Wednesday, observing, among other things, how the gradual trend of conferences having their media gatherings some early means that the echo of the final firecracker on Thursday will also be the opening bell, from a media standpoint, for College Football. And that conversation then moved to the most relevant of all Fourth of July topics: freedom.
āThe biggest story going into the season is how the transfer portal has changed things,ā Davis said. āAnd you know what? Iām good with it.
āThat doesnāt make me too popular with some of the coaches. But I donāt mind going on the record with it.
āAnything that gives the player more freedom, then Iām for it.ā
The gradual easing of the transfer rules hasnāt been universally embraced. Davis says he understands āthe frustration of fans and of coaches who want to have more control.ā He agrees that there āhas to be more consistency in placeā in terms of the way transfer waivers are applied. In some cases, like Luke Fordās transfer to Illinois, the waiver system works against them. Then in some cases, and I donāt want to single anyone out, but in some cases, guys get approved just because they didnāt think they were playing enough.ā
Davis said that, even in those cases, he tends to side with the player.
āAbout the only good reason I can come up with to be against (player movement without a sit-out penalty) is nostalgia,ā he said. āThere are fans out there who love good old State U. and they think that a player who signs there should stay until graduates. They think āI would do anything to play for State U., and so should the players.
āBut maybe a player has given everything he has to give and it just hasnāt worked out for him, and he doesnāt need to stay to the finish. Do kids make mistakes in those situations sometimes? Sure. But sometimes coaches make mistakes, too. Maybe not as often, but it happens. They decide a guy is just a special teams player, and he thinks heās a starter, and I think he has every right to pursue that.
āI donāt think every kid is looking to leave the first time things donāt go his way. I think people underestimate the one that is formed between a player and his team, his coaches and his teammates. We need to give the kids a little more of a say in their lives, just like we all have if we donāt like our job.ā
Much of that debate is philosophical. Some of it is economic. But it is also an issue that will affect the 2019 season in a profound way, a development that Davis is astute enough to recognize.
āFor an Oklahoma (with Jalen Hurts) or an Ohio State (with Justin Fields), it might be the quarterback who transferred in. For some other teams, itās the guy who transferred out and isnāt available. Itās that old cliche about every team ābeing a sprained ankle away from disaster,ā but it could be true. And itās not just injury. I went to Clemsonās second game last year (at Texas A&M), and Kelly Bryant really bailed Clemson out in that game. Look at Jalen in the SEC Championship Game. Now, there are teams with one proven quarterback or a talented freshman, but they donāt have that other guy.ā
All of that will play out with college football starting in just a few weeks ā and, speaking a sentiment that unites us all, not a minute too soon.
