Crawford is gone; Granted release per mother

If he does graduate in may then he will be granted an additional year by the ncaa giving him two years to play where ever he goes. Crawford was part of the 2012 class and if he was a GT option then he most likely has his academics in order.

An if he does graduate he can transfer to any school he wants, that has room for him so I can see where he feels his options to leave may be better. As for the BCC talk, he doesn't need to go that route.

Go Canes

He can only play one year but he does have a redshirt left.

If graduates in 3 years than he gets his 4th and 5th year as playing years, it is an incentive by the NCAA to reward players for getting thier degrees on time or better yet early. Jacob cooker used this rule to get 2 years at Obama after leaving FSU.

Fall 2012 - freshman
Fall 2013 - Soph
Fall 2014 - JR
Fall 2015 - St

So if Crawford came in with any type of AP credits which would put him ahead, then combined with stay in school over the summer and he could have earned enough to graduate.

http://www.tampabay.com/hometeam/blog/plant-dbwr-antonio-crawford-switches-his-commitment-miami/12558/

I can't believe McCord is a senior and they are still playing around with moving his position, he was one of the premiere pass rushers in the country coming out high school ****.

Go Canes

Are you sure that's right? I don't think so. Unless the NCAA has created a waiver of the maximum of four playing years Crawford would have one more year to to play. Crawford played in 2012, 2013 & 2014. That's three years. He's never redshirted. So he has one more playing year remaining. Because the NCAA allows for a maximum career of four playing years.

Jacob Coker is a different example because he took a redshirt year his Fresh year (2011). So he transferred to Alabama having only played two years (2012 and 2013), whereas Crawford has already played for three years. So you're right, Coker had two years when he transferred, this year (2014) and next year (2015). But Crawford will only have one more year.
 
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yeah, i don't think that's right. i don't think graduating early allows you to actually play 5 years. i'd need to see an example of someone who actually "played" all 5 years.
 
yeah, i don't think that's right. i don't think graduating early allows you to actually play 5 years. i'd need to see an example of someone who actually "played" all 5 years.

Yep, the NCAA only allows the early graduate to play immediately after transferring instead of sitting out a year...
 
Burns isnt good??

thank you Eye In The Sky.. always providing the lolzzz..

can you tell me about one play he made that sticks out?

I remember him destroying the qb Williams for UNC on a sack last year. He almost had 2 that game. He had a sack in another game too. i also remember him knocking away passes on a number of occasions.
 
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View attachment 29835

Two CIS/WEZ most wanted

what the **** are they doing around the math building?

are


burying foreign exchange students whose families forgot to pay their tuition

I saw Dorito behind the business school the other day on my walk to class. He seemed like he was looking for someone.

He's on a mission from Grohden to figure out why they have any business being employed here
 
http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/writer/jon-solomon/24574013/sec-considers-ending-ban-on-accepting-graduate-student-transfers

SEC considers ending ban on graduate student transfers

DESTIN, Fla. — The SEC is considering ending its graduate-student transfer ban. Three proposals from South Carolina are being discussed at the SEC spring meetings to put the SEC more in line with the NCAA rule that lets graduate students with eligibility remaining transfer to another school.

The NCAA adopted the rule in 2006 to allow graduates to transfer for their final year of eligibility as long as their new school has a graduate program the old school doesn't offer. The rule was seen as a carrot to athletes who graduate with eligibility left, but it has also been criticized as free agency in college sports.

The SEC applied the NCAA rule until 2011, when it opted out for one major reason: Jeremiah Masoli.

Masoli had graduated as an Oregon quarterback but got kicked off the Ducks team for disciplinary reasons. Ole Miss enrolled Masoli in a Parks and Recreation graduate program not offered at Oregon.

The NCAA initially denied Masoli's waiver to play immediately, but Ole Miss won its appeal and Masoli played in 2010. The rule also allowed former Utah cornerback Ryan Smith to play immediately at Florida in 2006.


After the Masoli affair, SEC Commissioner Mike Slive said he wished every other conference would use the SEC's current policy, which requires athletes to have at least two years of eligibility left to transfer into the league. The SEC does provide some waivers to graduate transfers on an individual basis.

Now South Carolina is proposing the SEC go the route of the NCAA, in large part due to competitive concerns. Graduate transfers have increasingly become a popular way for basketball coaches to replenish their rosters.

“This was more of a basketball issue than anything else,” South Carolina athletic director Ray Tanner said. “There have been a couple instances where we've been recruited against in our league with basketball possibilities because the player is immediately accepted into other institutions but not in the SEC because of the process. So it does put us at a little bit of a recruiting disadvantage.”

Ole Miss basketball coach Andy Kennedy signed two fifth-year players this season and is going through the process now of getting SEC waivers. Among the criteria for those players to participate immediately in the SEC: They must be in good academic standing, have had no academic or disciplinary trouble at their previous school, and never lost any APR points.

“But when you go through the waiver process, sometimes that's a competitive disadvantage in the recruiting process because maybe somebody outside tells a player, ‘We know we can take you, and you don't have to wait,'” Kennedy said.

SEC football coaches are also discussing the proposal.

“I don't think we've come to a conclusion,” Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin said. “It's affected me the other way — I've had two quarterbacks leave in two years and become eligible at other places.”

The South Carolina proposal justifies changing the SEC rule because of competitiveness factors and that the current rule “is contrary to student-athlete welfare and penalizes student-athletes who are successful in the classroom, but continue to have a desire to compete during their graduate studies. Graduate student-athletes should be afforded the same opportunity to receive a graduate education and compete at the highest level in the same manner allowed under NCAA rules.”

South Carolina proposed three options:

* Allow all graduate-student transfers to play immediately in the SEC.

* Let all graduate-student transfers play immediately in the SEC except in football. “The sport of football is excluded from this proposal in order to alleviate concerns related to lack of academic accountability for graduate students who might enroll for the fall term only and subsequently professionalize themselves,” the proposal says.

* Open up graduate-student transfers in the SEC only in basketball. “Since the basketball competitive season stretches into the spring semester, student-athletes remain academically accountable in order to remain eligible to compete,” the proposal states. “Basketball graduate students also remain accountable for the 'E' points in APR (eligibility), and institutions consequently have an interest in ensuring these student-athletes continue to succeed academically.”

The reaction among SEC ADs is “pretty mixed,” Tanner said. “I suppose we'll vote on it by the end of the week. We're just discussing it now.”
 
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Blame the kid or not, nothing changes the fact Golden loses more players than any coach I have ever seen. First year or two it can be excused, but he continues to have a horrific attrition rate that cannot be sustained. If he was recruiting numerous studs at each position, okay, but he claims to be recruiting "high character" guys.

Given Al's history of deadly attrition, it is hard to blame any kid at this point. Truth be know, Donna and Al have disgusted me so much that if I could get all my tuition and donations back, I would consider giving back my degree and never watching another game. If we get another Donna for the next president, I will probably just give up college sports completely. As it is, I am going on another cruise next month with more money for the casino that normally would have gone to THE U. The odds on the slots are better than Al's chance of stopping a run up the gut.
 
If he does graduate in may then he will be granted an additional year by the ncaa giving him two years to play where ever he goes. Crawford was part of the 2012 class and if he was a GT option then he most likely has his academics in order.

An if he does graduate he can transfer to any school he wants, that has room for him so I can see where he feels his options to leave may be better. As for the BCC talk, he doesn't need to go that route.

Go Canes

He can only play one year but he does have a redshirt left.

If graduates in 3 years than he gets his 4th and 5th year as playing years, it is an incentive by the NCAA to reward players for getting thier degrees on time or better yet early. Jacob cooker used this rule to get 2 years at Obama after leaving FSU.

Fall 2012 - freshman
Fall 2013 - Soph
Fall 2014 - JR
Fall 2015 - St

So if Crawford came in with any type of AP credits which would put him ahead, then combined with stay in school over the summer and he could have earned enough to graduate.

http://www.tampabay.com/hometeam/blog/plant-dbwr-antonio-crawford-switches-his-commitment-miami/12558/

I can't believe McCord is a senior and they are still playing around with moving his position, he was one of the premiere pass rushers in the country coming out high school ****.

Go Canes

Are you sure that's right? I don't think so. Unless the NCAA has created a waiver of the maximum of four playing years Crawford would have one more year to to play. Crawford played in 2012, 2013 & 2014. That's three years. He's never redshirted. So he has one more playing year remaining. Because the NCAA allows for a maximum career of four playing years.

Jacob Coker is a different example because he took a redshirt year his Fresh year (2011). So he transferred to Alabama having only played two years (2012 and 2013), whereas Crawford has already played for three years. So you're right, Coker had two years when he transferred, this year (2014) and next year (2015). But Crawford will only have one more year.

Miami has benefitted a lot from this grauduate transfer year rule in the past to land player like

2008 Xavier Shannon (transfered from FIU)

2013 Pat O’Donnell (Transferred from Cincy)
http://collegefootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/17/cincinnati-punter-transfers-to-miami-already-tops-depth-chart/

2013 David Gilbert (transfers from Wisconsin)
http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/eye-on-college-football/22560532/wisconsin-dl-david-gilbert-transferring-to-miami

2013 Justin Renfrow (transfers from Virginia)
http://www.stateoftheu.com/2013/8/10/4608708/football-adds-transfers-gilbert-renfrow

2014 Jake Heaps (transfered from Kansas)
 
Lol at the usual faqqots blaming Crawford.
I'm not gonna blame him, because this staph and its' corching is toxic...however, let's be real--think back folks. How many times in his career (I'm sure this stat has to be somewhere) did Crawford either get beat in coverage and/or end up getting a PI/Def. Holding penalty when the ball was thrown his way? Honestly, I was shocked when I saw a flag in our defensive backfield, and the call wasn't on Crawford. Most of the time, if he was in on the play--he was getting a flag.

Some of that is P-Dumb's corching, but I think a lot of that is Crawford playing out of control because he was frustrated w/how he was being asked to play. He cleaned that up a little bit last year and made some PBU's, but still, it was an adventure w/him every single time.

If he leaves, good luck to him. I hope he cleans it up enough to end up in the league, where his aggressive play would get rewarded on a more regular basis than on the collegiate level...especially if he ended up in a place like, say, Seattle where he'd be surrounded by defensive talent.
 
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