- Joined
- Dec 13, 2013
- Messages
- 4,038
At Gulliver!?! They even have a stupid kid campus.
See the New NCAA Academis Requirements alot of kid will get shocked this year trying to make it past compliance. Read an article thar stated if the 2016 rules were in effect for 2015 34% of the kids would have been ineligible or mandatory academic redshirtsIt's grades. He has a whole year to get his **** straightened out.
He was just channeling Jordy Nelson.
Yes, a devastating knee injury is hilarious. Particularly for a 30 year old receiver. Good stuff.
I was thinking the same thing.If he is in fact out due to academics, perhaps its time keeper of three kings puts down the twitter and helps her kid hit the books and get into college. High school is insultingly easy, if you are ineligible it is hard to feel sorry for you because you had to try to fail.
And 2016 needs 2.3 in core classesi read that he's below a 2.0 and it's not looking good. Prep school might not work out for him, he may have to go to JUCO
Can't remember who, but someone on Shadow's board posted a while back to not get your hopes up on this kid. Basically said there's no way he makes it in.
And that was months ago,he seemed close to the situation too.
Less blonde Mohawks. MOAR books and tutoring. Get your **** together fam. Gonna blow it
Less blonde Mohawks. MOAR books and tutoring. Get your **** together fam. Gonna blow it
The blonde Mohawks has nothing to do with hitting the books.....ijs
A 2.3 is NOT ****ing hard. All you actually need is to not get all D's. I don't feel sorry at all for these kids that can't maintain that. If you even put 25% effort into school, you should be able to get above a 2.3. You have homework, find the answers online. You're in class, listen to the **** teacher and take the notes. That's literally all the effort it takes to get above a 2.3, and that's practically nothing.
Maybe not meeting the gpa to get into UM is understandable if it's like a 3.0. But seriously you need to step your **** up if you can't get that in high school. I don't know how they can possibly succeed in college if they can't do it in high school. The level of difficulty increases 500%.
No you can't get all C's. ALL C's would be 2.0 and they need a 2.3 in math science english history and social sciences. .. that A in PE doesn't help anymore...but I'm with you...40% effort in HS should land you a 2.5 easy.A 2.3 is NOT ****ing hard. All you actually need is to not get all D's. I don't feel sorry at all for these kids that can't maintain that. If you even put 25% effort into school, you should be able to get above a 2.3. You have homework, find the answers online. You're in class, listen to the **** teacher and take the notes. That's literally all the effort it takes to get above a 2.3, and that's practically nothing.
Maybe not meeting the gpa to get into UM is understandable if it's like a 3.0. But seriously you need to step your **** up if you can't get that in high school. I don't know how they can possibly succeed in college if they can't do it in high school. The level of difficulty increases 500%.
Less blonde Mohawks. MOAR books and tutoring. Get your **** together fam. Gonna blow it
The blonde Mohawks has nothing to do with hitting the books.....ijs
Has to do with moms setting her son straight for the better good of the family.
Less blonde Mohawks. MOAR books and tutoring. Get your **** together fam. Gonna blow it
The blonde Mohawks has nothing to do with hitting the books.....ijs
Has to do with moms setting her son straight for the better good of the family.
I still don't see the connection. I know kids with mohawks and other crazy styles that work 10x harder and produce far more in the classroom than some clean-cut kids.
Less blonde Mohawks. MOAR books and tutoring. Get your **** together fam. Gonna blow it
The blonde Mohawks has nothing to do with hitting the books.....ijs
Has to do with moms setting her son straight for the better good of the family.
I still don't see the connection. I know kids with mohawks and other crazy styles that work 10x harder and produce far more in the classroom than some clean-cut kids.