SoCalTrjn wrote: I can see no valid argument against that system.
1. it's moronic.
2. not all state public institutions have the same "mandate" in terms of OOS students. for instance, the U of North Carolina is fiercely committed to providing top education to people from N. Carolina. It's very very difficult to be admitted out of state at UNC since there is a high demand (low cost, high quality education) and very few slots available. Something like 10% of each FR class. Oppositely, the U of Colorado makes it's "hay" off expensive out of state tuition and over 40 % of each class is OOS. So, by your scheme, CU would be rewarded and UNC punished for historical mandates dating back to the founding of the school. CU's OOS admission criteria are roughly equal to in-state, UNC's are vastly imbalanced and skewed toward OOS being much much more competitive. thus, OOS numbers at CU are high....at UNC low. advantage CU for entirely non-football, student population-based reasons.
3. States with only one D-1 institution would be arbitrarily advantaged v. those with say 2. Nebraska or Missouri (until Mis State, do they play football?) vs. Oklahoma that finished last season with 2 public U. ranked teams in a low population density state.
4. Cost of living varies and is reflected in tuition costs...which would come to bear on per player/scholly costs integral to this "proposal".
5. 2, 3, 4 do not give you a constant to make valid cross-state determinations of cost per player re: tuition costs.
6. would destroy many state U' baskteball programs...they would simply be unable to compete with 12 scholarships and only 2 or 3 allocated to OOS players. UCONN, for instance.
7. sounds like Canadian Pro Football....certain # of American players, etc. which is ghey.
8. recruiting would turn to high school JR's and elaborate and probably unethical ways to have them live "in-state" their senior year and get in-state residency. a more sophisticated cheating can of worms, just a year earlier. State legislatures full of football boosters would relax state residency requirements, etc. easy loopholes.
9. the tremendous advantage it would give private schools is not at all justifiable by a philosophical, principled argument. it tends towards a 2 division set up if you cannot establish a criterion for making the argument other than 1. it pleases me and my team to do so or 2. you are some kind of weird sporting Federalist.
10. again, to my point before, it steers "control" of the game to urban centers by virtue of the intensification of the logic of the political economy of media markets. might as well be the NFL.