Let's not kid ourselves, about loyalty in college athletics.
Doesn't the increasing trend toward not having loyalty to one's school have -- in part, at least -- its roots in the growing trend of high schoolers not being loyal to their schools and communities?
I agree parents often play a disconcerting role in this.
Depends. My reference was more to the BC, LSU and even Patrick's Irishmen of the college world. Go find a kid who plays Division III football, swimming or track, it is probably a different story.
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Mike:
I'm not sure, at least when it comes to big-time college basketball and even hockey, a sport I failed to mention in the first post. In high school hoops, at a certain level, it's pretty much conceded that a player's AAU team (or the equivalent) is their primary focus, and a way to get their name out among a broader range of Div. 1 coaches and play against hoopsters around the country at their skill level. The high school season is something of -- not quite an afterthought, but perhaps along the lines of a nuisance. I know of one local group of high school soccer players, who all played for the same high school team, who quit the team en masse in their junior year to go pursue some state or regional-level club.
Take a glance at the sheer number of early-entry college (even juco) players for the NBA draft this year. It's ridiculously long, and I count about three players I'd even consider 1st-round draft material with the prospects of long-term NBA success. I'm not sure it's disloyalty at the college level -- that's a pretty harsh word -- but the unwillingness of so many to do what is clearly in their best interest (stay in college, get a degree, learn to play basketball under good coaching) is the result, I'd argue, of trends we're seeing at the high school level.
Most Div. III athletes I know -- and I know quite a few -- compete mainly for their love of the sport. I'm sure they are loyal to the schools, as well, but they don't face the issue the way D1 athletes do, obviously.