DESTIN, Fla. — The Southeastern Conference wants a level playing field.
The league that boasts seven consecutive football national championships, resides in some of the country’s most fertile recruiting grounds, and has loads of history and fan support is complaining about being at a competitive disadvantage.
SEC coaches and administrators gathered in a lush, beachside resort hotel for their annual spring meetings and the agenda included discussion about evening things out by potentially tweaking rules regarding satellite camps and graduate transfers.
“If we’re going to compete for the championship, and everybody’s going to play in the playoff system and everybody’s going to compete for that, then we need to get our rules in alignment so we’re all on a level playing field,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said.
The league acted quickly on it, too.
The SEC announced Tuesday it will propose national legislation that would limit “institutional staff members to participating in camps and clinics on their own campus.”
The proposal comes a year after Penn State coach James Franklin and his staff appeared at a Georgia State football camp in Atlanta. SEC coaches bristled back then because league rules prohibit them from doing the same thing. And those camps are becoming more widespread. Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh is going on a nine-day, nine-city tour starting June 4 in Indianapolis and ending June 12 in Detroit. The one-day camps across the country include stops in Florida, Texas, California, and Alabama.
Ohio State’s Urban Meyer will attend a camp in Boca Raton on June 17.
“We want it to be done nationally, but there was a lot of conversation among our football coaches that we don’t want to be on the sidelines any longer if there’s not going to be a change more rapidly,” incoming SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said. “If that’s going to be the competitive landscape, they want to be fully engaged if the rule doesn’t change nationally.”
NCAA rules allow football programs to hold camps on their campus, inside their state or within a 50-mile radius of campus, but coaches can guest coach at another school’s camp — whether it’s another Football Bowl Subdivision school, a Division III school, or a high school.
The SEC and Atlantic Coast Conference have rules against guest coaching, in part because they don’t want their coaches treading on each other’s turf.
For programs such as Penn State and Michigan, satellite camps are a way to expand their reach into the fertile recruiting territory of the Southeast.
“All of us are against it, but there comes a point where we need to start doing it to keep up with Ohio State, Michigan, Penn State — the northern schools that are coming into the south,” South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier said. “Whether or not we need to allow some of our schools to do it will be discussed later.”
It seems naive or maybe even arrogant that the SEC would be campaigning for anything to level the playing field.
After all, most of the league has built-in recruiting advantages with weather, facilities, and rabid fan bases.
“Selfishly, I’d like to keep (camps) out of the state of Florida,” new Florida coach Jim McElwain said. “But, at the same time, right now, that’s what we’re dealing with as a conference. Where others are taking advantage of us is one of those camp issues.”
It’s not just camps, either.
Coaches also complained about the league’s graduate transfer rule. The SEC rule requires transfers to have two years of eligibility remaining to enroll. If not, those players must get a waiver. The league also requires a waiver for any player trying to transfer who was disciplined at his previous school.
“It’s a disadvantage not to be able to do something in one league and be able to do it in another,” Saban said. “It’s a disadvantage to be able to recruit a player in one league and not be able to do it in another. And it’s also a disadvantage if you start bringing up things like if a player gets suspended or whatever from one school, he can’t transfer to another. Well, these things need to be global. Otherwise, we’re going to become a farm system for all the other leagues.
“And then the first question we’re going to get asked is we won seven national championships in a row, win a national championship for seven years or whatever, and the first question I get asked is ‘What’s the state of the SEC, you haven’t been in the championship game the last two years?’ ”
n In related news, the SEC took steps to better identify concussions
The league passed a regulation Tuesday that requires an independent medical observer for conference and non-conference games beginning next season.
Each trained observer — hired by the conference, not the schools — will be stationed in the television replay booth and monitor both sidelines as well as on-field action. At least two schools used the setup last season, and now “we’ve broadened that to make it consistent across the league,” incoming SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said.
Sankey said the observer will have the power to halt games and have potentially concussed players pulled and evaluated.
Outgoing commissioner Mike Slive called the change a “safety net.”
“Most of the time, the sideline picks up those kind of things,” Slive said. “But in case they don’t, this gives us a safety net. We’re doing everything we can to protect the health and safety of our students.”
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