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    • Includes all levels of 4-year college football. In order to qualify, teams must have played a minimum of 182 games played over the past 26 seasons:  1 Mount Union OH D3 344 18 0.950 2 Mary Hardin-Baylor TX D3 284 40 0.877 3 Linfield OR D3 233 39 0.857 4 Ohio St OH FBS-P4 285 54 0.841 5 Grand Valley St MI D2 268 51 0.840 5 UW-Whitewater WI D3 268 51 0.840 7 Trinity CT CT D3 174 34 0.837 8 NW Missouri St MO D2 275 56 0.831 9 St John's MN MN D3 245 53 0.822 10 North Central IL D3 249 54 0.822 11 Grand View IA NAIA 179 40 0.817 12 Wheaton IL D3 232 53 0.814 13 North Dakota St ND FCS 280 65 0.812 14 Wartburg IA D3 228 53 0.811 15 Washington & Jefferson PA D3 231 55 0.808 16 Morningside IA NAIA 250 60 0.806 17 Boise St ID FBS-G5 270 67 0.801 18 Sioux Falls SD D2 243 61 0.799 19 Johns Hopkins MD D3 230 58 0.799 20 Wabash IN D3 217 55 0.798 21 Valdosta St GA D2 241 63 0.793 22 St Francis IN IN NAIA 242 64 0.791 23 Oklahoma OK FBS-P4 271 73 0.788 24 Colorado St-Pueblo CO D2 161 44 0.785 25 Georgia GA FBS-P4 271 76 0.781 26 Alabama AL FBS-P4 272 77 0.779 27 Shepherd WV D2 226 65 0.777 28 Hardin-Simmons TX D3 207 60 0.775 29 Carroll MT MT NAIA 242 71 0.773 30 Minnesota-Duluth MN D2 232 69 0.771
    • If you haven't taken a look at the Florida statute governing the FHSAA, you might want to:  https://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=1000-1099/1006/Sections/1006.20.html
    • I'm not entirely clear what the SSAA by-laws on transfers is, however if they're able to adopt a policy, even if it's through mutual understanding, then why can't a more established organization like FHSAA do the same?  There seems to be a lack of will and desire to pass the buck to the state legislature. To your hypothetical scenario, I don't know of anyone complaining about a transfer who is a legitimate move into the school's zone. Let's no deflect from the actual issue at hand, which is when multiple transfers from neighboring schools all end up at one school at the same time. 
    • PinellasFB, I hear what you are saying.   But how can the FHSAA restrict or limit transfers in light of the state legislature's mandate regarding school choice?    I don't often come to the defense of the FHSAA, but on this particular issue, it seems to me that they are in between a rock and a hard place.   As for the cap proposal, let me lay out a hypothetical for you:  you're the coach of a public high school in Pinellas County that is making some progress . . . at the beginning of the summer, you find out that four kids have transferred into your school - each for his own legitimate reason.  Not studs, but kids that might be able to help your team.   Then, out of the blue, right before school starts, Joe Stud's dad gets a job offer and his family moves down from Ohio into your district.  Under your proposal, if you let Joe play, your school will get kicked into the open division and you will likely give back all the ground you've gained over the last few years.  But if you make Joe sit out a year to preserve your status quo in the district, you can rest assured that Joe will go somewhere else.  What do you do?
    • Even more fun fact.  These public schools that take in transfers are always the same few schools.  MNW, Central, Venice, and few newcomers like Booker and West Boca etc.  There are wayyyyy more public schools than those few that you are referring to.
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