minutefanjsf wrote: Sat Mar 14, 2026 9:51 am
The exodus is rampant across the board...
In general yes, but there are teams that actually retain their players. The top two in the MAC, Miami and Akron both retained 9 players from last year to this year. I also randomly looked up Ohio because they were top of mind, and they returned 7 this year. Taking another random team, Bowling Green (honestly, these were random pulls aside from Akron and Miami), and they returned 7. I think we returned 3 rotation players (DHS, Ndjigue, Damjanac) and a walk-on, Rollie.
We were told that we had conference-leading NIL. If not the top of the MAC, certainly among the top. With the resources we have, we should be able to retain players on par with most of the conference. When you lose players like Jaylen Curry to Oklahoma St or Matt Cross to SMU, I get it. We can't match the big boys. But when you lose Keon Thompson to Stephen F Austin and he continues his upward trajectory, or Lewis Walker to NC A&T and he's a 19 pt 5 reb player from the word go, I just don't understand how that happens. Frank's style depends on continuity, even if the players are somewhat flawed. Telling players to go away, or redshirting and letting them walk to a lower conference is detrimental to the Frank Martin system.
Even though it won't happen, I hope everybody that is eligible stays for another year. That's how programs are built. Even if they're flawed (they all are), the continuity and leadership is more important than going out and getting replacements that are similarly flawed, and we have the recruiting staff and NIL budget to do it (supposedly). That's the only way that the Frank Martin system works.