Get f**ked Hawks
Agree, but the NCAA, even congress, will not be able to stop a player from transferring to another school at this point.The sport is heading to a time when it will be weird for a given player to not be hitting the portal annually.
The NCAA is not going to lead on this. They won't get off their asses even once 100% of all players hit the portal annually.
Time for the BIG and SEC to find a way forward.
As it should be, the idea of restricting people and their ability to move from one spot to another is insane.Agree, but the NCAA, even congress, will not be able to stop a player from transferring to another school at this point.
Izzo and Calipari were bitching about this when Baylor picked up the senior citizen from Nigeria, James Nnaji. The NCAA should have stopped this.
But there is no way they can stop a kid from transferring or limit the number of times he can transfer. A simple lawsuit will settle this on behalf of the athlete.
^^^^apparently he's homo, which makes the move from iowa all the more strange
Agree, but the NCAA, even congress, will not be able to stop a player from transferring to another school at this point.
Izzo and Calipari were bitching about this when Baylor picked up the senior citizen from Nigeria, James Nnaji. The NCAA should have stopped this.
But there is no way they can stop a kid from transferring or limit the number of times he can transfer. A simple lawsuit will settle this on behalf of the athlete.
It's so insane that every major sports league does it.As it should be, the idea of restricting people and their ability to move from one spot to another is insane.
The could 100% sign one year contracts in the NFL, right? The players choose to NOT do that because they don't think it is best for them, most of the time. Next.It's so insane that every major sports league does it.
Which is why the NFL, for instance, doesn't have every single player moving to a new team every single season.
Yep. Enforceable contracts in addition to many other things like franchise tags make it completely possible.The could 100% sign one year contracts in the NFL, right? The players choose to NOT do that because they don't think it is best for them, most of the time. Next.
In college you get 5 years (for the most part) and then it is gone forever.
Their unions voted for that.Yep. Enforceable contracts in addition to many other things like franchise tags make it completely possible.
Unrestricted free agency in a sports league is completely insane, which is why no other league does it.
New high school kids are gonna need to go to FCS to prove themselves first moving forward with a paid contract.I think the days of program building are about done. Developing players takes time, then they leave to chase the bag. I don’t blame them but it’s hard to get too invested as a casual fan in this environment.
lol…he wasn’t Iowa’s best player.When you’re the best player on a mid team, you get a free upgrade if you want it.
No one has ever been denied the right to transfer. That is where the big lie takes over. No one is forced to accept an athletic based scholarship…but if you did…the rules were you had to sit for a year if you transfer. You could still transfer. Even little leagues have eligibility and address restrictions. No one was being denied anything. College athletes were revered and at one time getting a scholarship and being able to play at that level was considered a privilege and an honor…as it should be.As it should be, the idea of restricting people and their ability to move from one spot to another is insane.
They were being denied and the rules have changed.No one has ever been denied the right to transfer. That is where the big lie takes over. No one is forced to accept an athletic based scholarship…but if you did…the rules were you had to sit for a year if you transfer. You could still transfer. Even little leagues have eligibility and address restrictions. No one was being denied anything. College athletes were revered and at one time getting a scholarship and being able to play at that level was considered a privilege and an honor…as it should be.