Afurmanfan wrote: ↑Mon Nov 22, 2021 4:22 pm
Thanks Dan. Was a good perspective on the changes from the 80s/90s to now, as well as the overall state of the program. Looks like we have found a QB that could make teams hesitate to put a lot of players in the box. Two freshman CBs playing the second half against Samford- they are freshman but I know that our staff likes their upside. We weren't quite good enough to make the few plays we needed this year, but the progress was obvious on the offensive side. As Clay said, pass rushers and cover guys are our most obvious personnel needs. Will look forward to seeing Jace with a year of off -season maybe getting to 185lbs and a spring and summer under his belt. I believe our 2 freshman RBs are good- a lot of young talent there. Josh and Ryan back next year. And it should be a lot more fun for the OC to call plays with a much more experienced QB, we definitely were limited in what we felt comfortable calling with the situation at QB. Sounds like we are keeping a few schollys open for transfer portal. It also sounds like our admin. realizes we need some help to be competitive with grad school coming next fall and support for the right kid in portal. I do believe we will take a QB in the portal if we find one that fits. Overall, with a freshman QB and one that is a great kid but struggled at times, we were a few plays away. The culture of this program was on display with the non stop effort by our players with no shot at the playoffs. That culture comes from the top down. We are in good hands.
It also sounds like our admin. realizes we need some help to be competitive with grad school coming next fall and support for the right kid in portal.
So that makes me wonder: Are there some graduate degree programs that would appeal to a larger number of football transfers that Furman could get up and running by 2022 or by 2023 that would be feasible (NOT diluting any department's undergraduate focus and attention, NOT diluting in any way the overall academic reputation of Furman, and NOT requiring any large amount of university financial resources.
What might those be? I don't know. Some places actually offer a masters degree in "liberal arts" (no specific area). Education graduate school (M.A.T.) is an obvious possibility, though I think we already have that or at least M.Ed. Is there any such thing as a Sports Counseling masters degree anywhere that would prepare and qualify people achieving such degree to counsel and advise college and high school athletes specifically, and would that be feasible for Furman to add in the context being considered here. These prospective graduate students coming to Furman will have already achieved their bachelor's degree and will have already experienced a great amount of sports experience while attending school; in other words, they supposedly would already know a lot about what their masters program would be covering and a lot about the athletic and academic demands on the people the degree would be preparing/credentialing them to serve in the future.
Again, I am just wondering what some possibilities might be.