Gus has looked pretty good lately.
Thanks for the info.
His running style completely changed when Ice arrived on campus. Night and day
Gus has looked pretty good lately.
Thanks for the info.
Gonna call BS on the "won't let them transfer" cr@p. First of all, the NCAA rules allow a student athlete to transfer is he or she choses to do so, it only limits when they must sit out of competition. Second, your current school can not, let me repeat, can not prohibit you from going to shcool anywhere. It can refuse to waive the wait-out period so that you can transfer and play. There are some limits on scholarships but that would not stop a quality player from transfering if another school really wanted them. Now do I believe that the U would refuse to waive so kids could go to FSU, UF, or an ACC school? Sure, that is very common. But, if let's say Howard wanted to leave, he could go to Iowa or Or. State, sit a year and then be a starter..............
Gonna call BS on the "won't let them transfer" cr@p. First of all, the NCAA rules allow a student athlete to transfer is he or she choses to do so, it only limits when they must sit out of competition. Second, your current school can not, let me repeat, can not prohibit you from going to shcool anywhere. It can refuse to waive the wait-out period so that you can transfer and play. There are some limits on scholarships but that would not stop a quality player from transfering if another school really wanted them. Now do I believe that the U would refuse to waive so kids could go to FSU, UF, or an ACC school? Sure, that is very common. But, if let's say Howard wanted to leave, he could go to Iowa or Or. State, sit a year and then be a starter..............
Kids have to sit out a year regardless. If they aren't granted a release from the school, they have to sit out TWO years.
Gonna call BS on the "won't let them transfer" cr@p. First of all, the NCAA rules allow a student athlete to transfer is he or she choses to do so, it only limits when they must sit out of competition. Second, your current school can not, let me repeat, can not prohibit you from going to shcool anywhere. It can refuse to waive the wait-out period so that you can transfer and play. There are some limits on scholarships but that would not stop a quality player from transfering if another school really wanted them. Now do I believe that the U would refuse to waive so kids could go to FSU, UF, or an ACC school? Sure, that is very common. But, if let's say Howard wanted to leave, he could go to Iowa or Or. State, sit a year and then be a starter..............
Kids have to sit out a year regardless. If they aren't granted a release from the school, they have to sit out TWO years.
I thought it was that they had to sit out one year, but couldn't receive a scholarship so they had to pay their own way for that year If they weren't given a release
Unfortunately, the Kaaya experiment this year ended as a complete failure.
Am a Gus the Bus fan because I like them big running backs to compliment the speedsters and slashers.
Thanks Vern. Finally a good thread.
Gonna call BS on the "won't let them transfer" cr@p. First of all, the NCAA rules allow a student athlete to transfer is he or she choses to do so, it only limits when they must sit out of competition. Second, your current school can not, let me repeat, can not prohibit you from going to shcool anywhere. It can refuse to waive the wait-out period so that you can transfer and play. There are some limits on scholarships but that would not stop a quality player from transfering if another school really wanted them. Now do I believe that the U would refuse to waive so kids could go to FSU, UF, or an ACC school? Sure, that is very common. But, if let's say Howard wanted to leave, he could go to Iowa or Or. State, sit a year and then be a starter..............
Kids have to sit out a year regardless. If they aren't granted a release from the school, they have to sit out TWO years.
I thought it was that they had to sit out one year, but couldn't receive a scholarship so they had to pay their own way for that year If they weren't given a release
Yes.
If no release is given, the other school can't give a scholarship for the season they sit out ... So, the kid has to pay their own way.
If the release is given, the kid is on scholarship while sitting out.
But the original school can still "condition" where the kid can go.
This sickens me man. These kids won't even look back on their time here and remember it as a good one. Who knows if they will even be proud to be Canes.
Gonna call BS on the "won't let them transfer" cr@p. First of all, the NCAA rules allow a student athlete to transfer is he or she choses to do so, it only limits when they must sit out of competition. Second, your current school can not, let me repeat, can not prohibit you from going to shcool anywhere. It can refuse to waive the wait-out period so that you can transfer and play. There are some limits on scholarships but that would not stop a quality player from transfering if another school really wanted them. Now do I believe that the U would refuse to waive so kids could go to FSU, UF, or an ACC school? Sure, that is very common. But, if let's say Howard wanted to leave, he could go to Iowa or Or. State, sit a year and then be a starter..............
Kids have to sit out a year regardless. If they aren't granted a release from the school, they have to sit out TWO years.
I thought it was that they had to sit out one year, but couldn't receive a scholarship so they had to pay their own way for that year If they weren't given a release
Yes.
If no release is given, the other school can't give a scholarship for the season they sit out ... So, the kid has to pay their own way.
If the release is given, the kid is on scholarship while sitting out.
But the original school can still "condition" where the kid can go.
And people still wonder why kids will take illegal benefits. This is slave labor. Indentured Servants being brought to this country from China in the early 1800's had better employment contracts than NCAA athletes do today.