I could not disagree more with the idea that high schools have the hardest road. For better or worse, high school demands very little outside work, essentially nothing compared to most college majors. You also need to remember that many of those high school players would not be going home and studying were it not for football. It's more likely in some cases that the time commitment with football is keeping them out of trouble. With that said, I feel that since
most high school games are played in district, on Friday night,
there is minimal academic impact at this level.
"And, (in theory) every FBS player is vetted as a student as someone who in college material with the potential to graduate."
As a fan, I love our team, and the effort out players put in, but come on. We were recruiting
a guy at one point that had a 900 on his SAT. Lets be honest, were it not for football, many players at every school would not be in school.
Most High School games are indeed played relatively close, but this was never about most games. It was about weeks 13, 14, 15...which some states play to win a championship. In those late weeks it is almost certainly a long bus ride and often an overnight stay vice a flight back the night of.
To the point, I coached High School football for a number of years and I can tell you that I have seen academic impact as very real. I can tell you that there is significant impact for a student who misses half a day of school for travel in the fall, because there are no Bryant Hall Academic centers, or staffs of tutors available for every subject. These kids don't live on or near campus so that they can participate in study groups virtually at will. If the teenager, his parents (who more than likely are not educators themselves), and the teachers are not on their A-game, the players often struggle. That's the academic impact of playoffs. On the flip side, I have seen grades spike in the spring. The only factor that changes is the football.
If FBS teams and other elite level sports did not have a good thing going academically, and if there was not a misconception about academics and athletics, the NCAA would not be running commercials boasting about the fact that the average college athlete carries a high GPA than the average students. That academic efforts make a difference, and high school don't enjoy the same advantages.
I'll not base my point on a single "guy" example, but cite all those players who don't make it academically at all, and consequently we never hear about. If a kid is not taking care of his grades to a certain level in high school, they don't get much press because Colleges are not offering him. If that kid had an even lower SAT score than 900, we would never had heard of him, but he still would have been suiting up in High School. No doubt that part of the recruiting pitch was providing him academic help that he currently is not getting.