marquette wrote:I'm not sure I see it. Most players that wind up at Big East schools are recruited by those same schools. They chose us.
marquette wrote:
I'm not sure I see it. Most players that wind up at Big East schools are recruited by those same schools. They chose us.
Fordham freshman guard Nick Honor was named to the 2019 Atlantic 10 men's basketball All-Rookie team it was announced by the league office today.
CLEMSON, S.C. — Clemson University men’s basketball added Fordham transfer guard Nick Honor, announced by head coach Brad Brownell.
Honor, a 5-foot, 10-inch point guard, recently completed his freshman season. He appeared in all 32 games for Fordham, averaging 36.1 minutes per contest. He led the Rams in scoring (15.3 points per game) and finished 37.3 percent from the floor, 33.2 percent from distance, including an impressive 81.6 percent from the foul line. Prior to the Atlantic-10 Conference tournament, Honor was named to the 2019 Atlantic-10 All-Rookie team. He finished the season as the highest scoring freshman in the league.
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill to allow college athletes to hire agents and make money from endorsements. The measure, the first of its kind, threatens the business model of college sports.
California threatened that standard on Monday after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill to allow players to strike endorsement deals and hire agents.
The new law, which is supposed to take effect in 2023, attacks the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s long-held philosophy that college athletes should earn a degree, not money, for playing sports. That view, also under assault in several other states and on Capitol Hill, has held up even as the college sports industry swelled into a behemoth that generated at least $14 billion last year, and as athletes faced mounting demands on their bodies and schedules.
Under the California measure, thousands of student-athletes in America’s most populous state will be allowed to promote products and companies, trading on their sports renown for the first time. And although the law applies only to California, it sets up the possibility that leaders in college sports will eventually have to choose between changing the rules for athletes nationwide or barring some of America’s sports powerhouses from competition.
64 St. John's • Big East
74 DePaul • Big East
159 Northwestern • Big Ten
184 Nebraska • Big Ten
228 Saint Joseph's • Atlantic 10
276 Fordham • Atlantic 10
BEwannabe wrote:
The net impact on top tier programs will be negligible but the churn won’t be positive.
BEwannabe wrote:
The notion the BE would be a vulnerable target is pure folly, basketball only schools in particular BE provide a unique experience to offer.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
NCAA takes step toward allowing one-time transfers for athletes without sitting out - Ben Kercheval & Dennis Dodd, CBS Sports - February 18, 2020
The NCAA's Transfer Waiver Working Group on Tuesday announced a concept is under consideration that would allow undergraduate student athletes in all sports to transfer once without sitting out of competition for one year.
Student-athletes across all sports would be able to transfer once as undergraduates without sitting out a year in residence so long as they: (a) receive a transfer release from their previous school, (b) leave their previous school academically eligible, (c) maintain their academic progress at the new school and (d) depart under no disciplinary suspension.
The current rule mandates that undergraduate transfers in the aforementioned sports must receive a waiver from the NCAA to be eligible immediately.
The waiver process being utilized could allow a change to go into effect as early as this year.
… Calipari took a question about the FBI’s investigation of hoops corruption and turned it into a long-winded take on a proposed NCAA rule change that would allow football and basketball players to transfer and be eligible immediately.
The Hall of Fame coach, after breaking down the pros and cons of the rule, came to the conclusion: “It’s crazy.”
“This – if they go with it, which I hear they are – it doesn’t hurt Kentucky, it helps us. We’re going to have all kinds of calls, kids wanting to join our program. ... OK. But what does it do to all the mid-majors, low majors, or even the bottom half of the Power Fives?”
Calipari, in considering the rule, has put himself in the shoes of those coaches, the ones who make up a strong majority of Division I college basketball. “I mean, now, who do you recruit?” he asked. “Do you recruit junior college players to know you’ll have ’em? Do you get grad transfers? If you get a really good high school player, is he gonna stay more than one year? Or, if he leaves, what’s it do to the kids in the program – not just him?”
There would, presumably, be penalties for what most professional sports governing bodies consider “tampering.” Coaches wouldn’t, or shouldn’t, be able to actively recruit content players from rival schools in the middle of seasons. The problem, Calipari seemed to say, is enforcement. How do you ensure tampering gets penalized?
His idea is that a coach found guilty should lose his job. “Go to the phones,” Calipari said. “If I called an AAU coach or a high school coach, and he called the kid, we just tampered, I get fired. You fire the coaches.”
However, he conceded: “I just don’t know if they [NCAA officials] are capable of doing that.”
And if they’re not? “We’re going to be handing out, in the handshake line, business cards, when the games end,” Calipari said. “I mean … people don’t know the unintended consequences, and they haven’t talked to coaches enough.
But trying to distinguish between acceptable transfers and unacceptable ones doesn’t seem feasible. That’s what the current system necessitates. It’s what any system necessitates. “I don’t know how you deal with that,” Calipari admitted.
“I mean, it’s crazy.”
DAYTON -- University of Dayton men's basketball coach Anthony Grant has announced that Chase Johnson, a 6-foot-9, 219-pound forward from Ripley, West Virginia, will transfer to UD from the University of Florida. Johnson will enroll at UD for the second semester, and be eligible next season after the completion of the first semester. Johnson was rated a four-star performer coming out of high school, and ranked 85th in his class.
The NCAA is "unlikely" to give another year of eligibility to college basketball athletes whose seasons were cut short due to the cancelation of the NCAA Tournament, according to a report by CBS' Jon Rothstein. This will not only affect the men's and women's basketball athletes, but all winter sports.
A move to grant an extra season of play would surely have been unexpected. Every men's and women's basketball team finished all regular-season competitions before the NCAA cancelled its championship events due to the coronavirus. Some teams had completely wrapped up their 2019-20 season by virtue of losing in their conference tournament.
Allowing players to return, some for a fifth season, to run it back for another chance at a conference or national championship would also create several logistical nightmares.
Granting eligibility wouldn't be just for a select few, it would have to be all or nothing. So those individuals on sub-.500 teams whose seasons were finished would get the extra year if any team projected to make the tournament also got the relief. To allow players to stay on a team, they would also have to lift the scholarship limit of 13 full scholarships on a Division I team to allow high school seniors to play for programs they already committed to. If they lifted the limit, by how much would they lift it and to what end? There would be ripple effects beyond just the upcoming 2020-21 year.
There are a lot of issues the NCAA already has to navigate during this rough climate. An extra year for players who essentially had finished their seasons just doesn't make sense.
This year will just end up being a lost season for everyone.
Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:Sanity prevails:
Report: NCAA unlikely to grant an extra year of eligibility for basketball players – NBC Sports - March 18, 2020The NCAA is "unlikely" to give another year of eligibility to college basketball athletes whose seasons were cut short due to the cancelation of the NCAA Tournament, according to a report by CBS' Jon Rothstein. This will not only affect the men's and women's basketball athletes, but all winter sports.
A move to grant an extra season of play would surely have been unexpected. Every men's and women's basketball team finished all regular-season competitions before the NCAA cancelled its championship events due to the coronavirus. Some teams had completely wrapped up their 2019-20 season by virtue of losing in their conference tournament.
Allowing players to return, some for a fifth season, to run it back for another chance at a conference or national championship would also create several logistical nightmares.
Granting eligibility wouldn't be just for a select few, it would have to be all or nothing. So those individuals on sub-.500 teams whose seasons were finished would get the extra year if any team projected to make the tournament also got the relief. To allow players to stay on a team, they would also have to lift the scholarship limit of 13 full scholarships on a Division I team to allow high school seniors to play for programs they already committed to. If they lifted the limit, by how much would they lift it and to what end? There would be ripple effects beyond just the upcoming 2020-21 year.
There are a lot of issues the NCAA already has to navigate during this rough climate. An extra year for players who essentially had finished their seasons just doesn't make sense.
This year will just end up being a lost season for everyone.
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