TexasTerror
June 5th, 2006, 07:21 PM
We now have an article from the Richmond Times-Dispatch about the whole 11 games versus 12 games issue. Several points brought up about lack of depth and of course, prep for the playoffs are brought up. Nice to see an article from a paper about the issue. More I-AA coverage about national issues, the better...:thumbsup:
I-AA shortchanged with 11-game slates?
Or would adding 12th game to match I-A level be one too many?
BY JOHN O'CONNOR
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
Jun 5, 2006
Give your opinion on this story
Division I-A football programs for decades have had more scholarship players, more full-time assistant coaches and thousands more stadium seats than Division I-AAs. Now the I-As have one more regular-season game.
The NCAA Board of Directors announced in the spring of 2005 that I-As in 2006 can start playing a dozen, one more than generally allowed in the past. The same board determined this spring that there would be no change in I-AA. An 11-game regular season is the limit.
"What makes it different?" asks former University of Richmond quarterback Jimmie Miles.
Advocates of maintaining I-AA's regular-season game ceiling at 11, including UR coach Dave Clawson and William and Mary coach Jimmye Laycock, believe I-AA depth issues and I-AA's playoff system make an 11-game schedule the sensible approach. I-AA programs can offer as many as 63 scholarships -- compared to I-A's 85-scholarship limit -- and compete for 16 postseason berths.
http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD%2FMGArticle%2FRTD_BasicArti cle&%09s=1045855934926&c=MGArticle&cid=1149188254636&path=!sports!colleges
I-AA shortchanged with 11-game slates?
Or would adding 12th game to match I-A level be one too many?
BY JOHN O'CONNOR
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
Jun 5, 2006
Give your opinion on this story
Division I-A football programs for decades have had more scholarship players, more full-time assistant coaches and thousands more stadium seats than Division I-AAs. Now the I-As have one more regular-season game.
The NCAA Board of Directors announced in the spring of 2005 that I-As in 2006 can start playing a dozen, one more than generally allowed in the past. The same board determined this spring that there would be no change in I-AA. An 11-game regular season is the limit.
"What makes it different?" asks former University of Richmond quarterback Jimmie Miles.
Advocates of maintaining I-AA's regular-season game ceiling at 11, including UR coach Dave Clawson and William and Mary coach Jimmye Laycock, believe I-AA depth issues and I-AA's playoff system make an 11-game schedule the sensible approach. I-AA programs can offer as many as 63 scholarships -- compared to I-A's 85-scholarship limit -- and compete for 16 postseason berths.
http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD%2FMGArticle%2FRTD_BasicArti cle&%09s=1045855934926&c=MGArticle&cid=1149188254636&path=!sports!colleges