A seven week difference is considered a huge benefit to a player. Now, he has even more pressure to make his decision during his senior season versus after his senior season.
Not true. If he's too pressured he can wait until the next signing day... Remember?
You've suggested the reason to support an early signing period is "they're guaranteed a spot" if they sign early versus being "strung along" by schools if February is the only date.
With 70% plus signing early that means their decisions are being made
during their senior year in school academically as well as during their senior seasons playing football. Recruiters will pressure kids to sign early. They already are.
There's nothing I've written here that isn't true. Schools want kids to sign early and they recruit them to sign early.
"...if he's too pressured he can wait until the next signing day" where, as you've asserted, they're going to be strung along with the chance of not having a spot open? We have coaching staffs telling kids they need to sign early because there's a chance they won't have a spot but that's not applying more pressure during their senior season?
Facts of the matter say it's not even seven weeks considering a good three, or more, of those weeks were in the dead period anyway. Now, these families don't have the ability to sit back and contemplate which school would be the best without having different staffs recruiting them day and night.
What I see being ignored is there is no difference now, as compared to a few years ago. There isn't more opportunity, just more pressure on when. In the end, it's still a zero sum game. The number of opportunities remain the same regardless of the date they sign.