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Disagree with this. A team at UConn's level depends on finding less-regarded but still talented prospects and coaching them up. This is especially true in the Northeast where the high school preparation isn't as good as Texas or Florida. By the team our players are redshirt juniors and seniors, they can compete with the players Texas and Alabama get out of high school. With an 80-player roster, we'll be 1- or 2-deep with capable players, Texas or Alabama will be 3- or 4-deep, but barring injuries we can compete with them.
Cut the scholarships in half, and Texas and Alabama are now 2-deep at every spot, UConn starts to have holes where unprepared freshman have to start. We get crushed when playing them. It's true there are more talented players spread around, but many will end up at non-BCS schools and even 1-AA schools. In any given year, depending on when a lot of talent graduates, a lower-level team like a UMass or Buffalo could be better than a Big East team. It would be like basketball, where only a few elite schools have consistent success -- all the next tier schools get a group of great players but then they graduate and you have a down year.
Personally, I think there's value to (a) seeing high-level football played at the BCS level, so letting a group of ~60 teams have large enough rosters that they can coach up talented players for a few years before playing them; and (b) giving plenty of young athletes a chance for a free education. Cut the scholarships per team, and a lot of athletes lose out.
While I tend to disagree with the broad generalization in your first paragraph spanning true freshmen coming out of high school as compared to RS Jr's and Sr's from up north.....I agree with the general idea you've put out. You touch on a subject that I've written about a bit. Youth football in the Northeast USA. That's where the difference trully lies in the recruiting landscape. The public perception and the media influence on conference affiliation and all of that is all fluff.
It's the quality of player that you plan on bringing into your program from day 1 that is what it's all about. I've talked about that so much around here. Elevating the level of competition within our own roster, and by extension elevating our level of play on the field on game days in the fall, is what it's going to take to get this program to continue on the upward curve, and I believe what i"m seeing so far from 2010, 2011, and now 2012....we most definitely are ramping up the quality of player coming in to the program from day 1.
If youth football ever comes back in full force in the northeast, there will be more than enough players to field a roster that is four deep the way you describe with local northeast players. I'll save the long dissertation as to why youth football declined in the north east over the past 35-40 years, but again is on the rise. Short version is that kids are begining again to have the opportunity to earn so many more scholarships in football than in any other sport, and northeast college football is beginning to implement scholarships in large volumes again.