Starman said:
The NCAA has a zillion ****ing rules about everything. Here's one they should adopt right now:
"At any press conference or other media event of any type conducted by a student-athlete to announce his/her choice of institution, the ONLY logo/insignia of any NCAA institution which may appear shall be the institution chosen by the student-athlete. If any article of clothing, paraphernalia, artwork or any other representation of ANY OTHER NCAA institution appears in public at any such announcement event, the student-athlete shall be ineligible for 50 percent of the scheduled contests, plus one, in the succeeding season of competition. It is the responsibility of the student-athlete to ensure, by any means necessary, nobody attending any such announcement event violates this rule."
So let's say a kid in Louisiana plans to sign with Alabama, and someone in the crowd is wearing an LSU T-shirt. By the letter of your law, the recruit ought to get dinged for that?
Or, it's up to the recruit to escort that person out of the building "by any means necessary" -- awfully vague wording for what's likely to be a 17- or 18-year-old with a large ego, sense of entitlement, and an entourage that's eager to enforce his will and unlikely to back down when the person in the audience says "no."