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By Justin Graves Sports
College baseball and bragging rights.
These days, in Alabama, there just is not a whole lot to brag about.
Alabama is experiencing a coaching transition after the mediocrity that was the Mitch Gaspard era.
Auburn is a little further along in its coaching transition, with Butch Thompson preparing for his second season as he attempts to repair the comedy of missteps taken by predecessor Sunny Golloway.
And as College World Series games air on television, the stateās SEC fans wonder when Alabama or Auburn will ever be good enough to compete on the national stage.
Hereās the cold, harsh truth:
Probably not soon.
Itās not a talent issue.
During the past few years, the high school baseball talent has been at a high level, and the current class of rising high school seniors is one of the deepest classes the state has produced in decades.
Several of the top recruits in that class are headed to state schools, too. Cullmanās Owen Lovell and Brewerās Dakota Bennett are Alabama commitments. Decaturās Tanner Burns and Cullmanās Carter Bowen are headed to Auburn.
Those signing classes will help, but there still is a bigger issue.
When it comes to filling rosters, the stateās major Division I baseball programs are at a significant disadvantage.
Letās call it the Lottery Letdown.
According to NCAA rules, Division I baseball programs are allotted just 11.7 scholarships to divide among 35 players. This means coaches have to be creative when extending athletic scholarship offers to prospects.
Top-tier prospects may receive an athletic scholarship that covers 80 percent of a playerās tuition, while others may receive 20 percent, or then again, just enough to cover books.
And when the scholarship money runs out, the rest of the roster is filled with walk-ons.
But teams located where there is a state lottery have a solution to this issue. Because lottery money is used to provide financial aid to college students, teams located in lottery states use that money to help in-state players cover their costs, saving much of the 11.7 athletic scholarships for out-of-state prospects.
How big of an advantage does this create?
Just look at this yearās College World Series.
The six public schools in the eight-team field come from lottery states. The other two teams are private schools that can be a little more creative with how they apply academic scholarships.
This is not a new trend, either.
Programs from lottery states have dominated college baseballās national stage. Meanwhile, Alabama's and Auburnās baseball programs have significantly declined during the past decade, struggling to qualify for the SEC tournament, much less make postseason appearances.
Currently, there only are six states that do not have a lottery: Alabama, Mississippi, Utah, Nevada, Hawaii and Alaska.
Until Alabama adds a lottery, donāt expect the stateās Division I baseball programs to climb the national hierarchy and become College World Series contenders.
It doesnāt matter who is coaching Alabama and Auburnās programs, or how well they recruit within the state. Until a lottery is added, or the NCAA changes it scholarship limitations, the system is not in their favor.
When you canāt recruit regionally, much less nationally, becoming a national power in big-time college sports is not possible
Decatur DailyāContinue reading...
These days, in Alabama, there just is not a whole lot to brag about.
Alabama is experiencing a coaching transition after the mediocrity that was the Mitch Gaspard era.
Auburn is a little further along in its coaching transition, with Butch Thompson preparing for his second season as he attempts to repair the comedy of missteps taken by predecessor Sunny Golloway.
And as College World Series games air on television, the stateās SEC fans wonder when Alabama or Auburn will ever be good enough to compete on the national stage.
Hereās the cold, harsh truth:
Probably not soon.
Itās not a talent issue.
During the past few years, the high school baseball talent has been at a high level, and the current class of rising high school seniors is one of the deepest classes the state has produced in decades.
Several of the top recruits in that class are headed to state schools, too. Cullmanās Owen Lovell and Brewerās Dakota Bennett are Alabama commitments. Decaturās Tanner Burns and Cullmanās Carter Bowen are headed to Auburn.
Those signing classes will help, but there still is a bigger issue.
When it comes to filling rosters, the stateās major Division I baseball programs are at a significant disadvantage.
Letās call it the Lottery Letdown.
According to NCAA rules, Division I baseball programs are allotted just 11.7 scholarships to divide among 35 players. This means coaches have to be creative when extending athletic scholarship offers to prospects.
Top-tier prospects may receive an athletic scholarship that covers 80 percent of a playerās tuition, while others may receive 20 percent, or then again, just enough to cover books.
And when the scholarship money runs out, the rest of the roster is filled with walk-ons.
But teams located where there is a state lottery have a solution to this issue. Because lottery money is used to provide financial aid to college students, teams located in lottery states use that money to help in-state players cover their costs, saving much of the 11.7 athletic scholarships for out-of-state prospects.
How big of an advantage does this create?
Just look at this yearās College World Series.
The six public schools in the eight-team field come from lottery states. The other two teams are private schools that can be a little more creative with how they apply academic scholarships.
This is not a new trend, either.
Programs from lottery states have dominated college baseballās national stage. Meanwhile, Alabama's and Auburnās baseball programs have significantly declined during the past decade, struggling to qualify for the SEC tournament, much less make postseason appearances.
Currently, there only are six states that do not have a lottery: Alabama, Mississippi, Utah, Nevada, Hawaii and Alaska.
Until Alabama adds a lottery, donāt expect the stateās Division I baseball programs to climb the national hierarchy and become College World Series contenders.
It doesnāt matter who is coaching Alabama and Auburnās programs, or how well they recruit within the state. Until a lottery is added, or the NCAA changes it scholarship limitations, the system is not in their favor.
When you canāt recruit regionally, much less nationally, becoming a national power in big-time college sports is not possible
Decatur DailyāContinue reading...
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