"On the partial qualifiers rule, Osborne said, “Where this rule can hurt you is if a player is considering Nebraska and Ohio State or some other school in the Big Ten.†Osborne was an historically deft recruiter, but it’s always difficult to recruit and get a*top recruit*to play in Nebraska. The weather in Nebraska is one thing, and the idea that there isn’t anything to do in Nebraska is another.* On that note, how does a Nebraska, a Kansas, or a Missouri compete with the Florida, Texas and California schools when it comes to top tier recruits?* Why would one damage their ability to recruit in this regard?* The NCAA does not limit the number of partial qualifiers a school can recruit, but each individual conference has this ability.* The Big 12 enforced the strictest standards of any conference.* They limited the number of partial qualifiers to one male and one female.* The Big 10 does not have such standards.* The Big 10 focuses their standards on a student that is enrolled in school.* In other words, the Big 10 does not limit the recruit, until he is in school.* At that point, if he doesn't get his grades up he won't play, but the Big 10 does not limit its schools in their recruiting procedures.*"
From a 2010 article. It makes me chuckle every time I read the bs about big ten academic standards for athletes.