May 9th 2010, 12:37:32
Yes.
According to the NCAA, when a team recruits too well you take away their right to recruit. Cllassic examples are SMU, USC and Bama. SMU had the two greatest recruiting classes of all ime; they got the death penalty. USC has a fifty year tradition of illegal recruiting; they have ruined their conference becasue the conference will not discipline them. Bama was allowed to win the BS championship despite being on probation for cheating.
We should adopt the NCAA model of restricting recruiting for organizations which are caught cheating.
The size and duration of the restriction would be based on the severity of the cheating just like in the NCAA.
A hypothetical clan which has been caught cheating and does not deserve the death penalty,
the first reset after the violation
restricted to 80% of their size at the time of the violation
second reset if no new violations
85% of size at the time of the violation
This is not punitive merely remedial.
According to the NCAA, when a team recruits too well you take away their right to recruit. Cllassic examples are SMU, USC and Bama. SMU had the two greatest recruiting classes of all ime; they got the death penalty. USC has a fifty year tradition of illegal recruiting; they have ruined their conference becasue the conference will not discipline them. Bama was allowed to win the BS championship despite being on probation for cheating.
We should adopt the NCAA model of restricting recruiting for organizations which are caught cheating.
The size and duration of the restriction would be based on the severity of the cheating just like in the NCAA.
A hypothetical clan which has been caught cheating and does not deserve the death penalty,
the first reset after the violation
restricted to 80% of their size at the time of the violation
second reset if no new violations
85% of size at the time of the violation
This is not punitive merely remedial.
Edited By: gregg on May 9th 2010, 12:40:46
RESTRICT LaE to 80% of its cheat size