TylerDurden wrote:You currently can't transfer and then play within the same athletic season, semester break or not, because the NCAA determines eligibility for any one player at any one school by sport season.
The significance of a school's academic calendar is in determining academic eligibility as part of the transfer process, i.e., did you make sufficient grades to remain eligible.
I can't imagine a reasonable court saying that this is any sort of undue burden and I don't know that there's any other reasonable way to determine or count athletic eligibility.
BEARZ77 wrote:TylerDurden wrote:You currently can't transfer and then play within the same athletic season, semester break or not, because the NCAA determines eligibility for any one player at any one school by sport season.
The significance of a school's academic calendar is in determining academic eligibility as part of the transfer process, i.e., did you make sufficient grades to remain eligible.
I can't imagine a reasonable court saying that this is any sort of undue burden and I don't know that there's any other reasonable way to determine or count athletic eligibility.
The only question I have about that Tyler, is there have been kids who've transferred in at semester under the old system and been able to play. The most memorable to me was Paul Oliney signing with MU at semester break after watching MU get killed by Arkansas in Nov., then leading MU to the BIG8 title second semester.
BEARZ77 wrote:
Also kids have been held out of second semester playing after not meeting requirements in the 1st semester, which would suggest that if they can be held out as ineligible, then why couldn't it signal eligibility if you are in good standing for transfer to another school. also vice versa , Roshonda Reed was held out of 1st semester playing back in the 90's until she had gotten grades back up , and then she was eligible second semester.
TylerDurden wrote:BEARZ77 wrote:
Also kids have been held out of second semester playing after not meeting requirements in the 1st semester, which would suggest that if they can be held out as ineligible, then why couldn't it signal eligibility if you are in good standing for transfer to another school. also vice versa , Roshonda Reed was held out of 1st semester playing back in the 90's until she had gotten grades back up , and then she was eligible second semester.
This bit got in after I hit reply, but it's a question worth considering.
What you described speaks to how the NCAA determines the eligibility for one player for one sport season at one school. If that changes, then player could theoretically move at semester during a sports season.
I don't think that a shift in the eligibility process will happen in any voluntary way because: 1.) Schools would almost unanimously be opposed; 2.) Schools are the ones who make the NCAA rules; 3.) I don't think that there's anything illegal against having eligibility rules - no one is forcing players to play in NCAA competition.
To me, the question this hypothetical centers on is if the NCAA is allowed to set eligibility rules for people who elect to participate in their competitions. I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me the answer is yes - provided they aren't illegal.
BEARZ77 wrote: But aren't transfer rules eligibility rules, and they're saying they can't make kids ineligible and have to sit after a second transfer, so that's saying they can't enforce some eligibility rules ??
TylerDurden wrote:BEARZ77 wrote: But aren't transfer rules eligibility rules, and they're saying they can't make kids ineligible and have to sit after a second transfer, so that's saying they can't enforce some eligibility rules ??
As I understand it, the NCAA is now saying that they no longer require a waiver for second-or-more time transfers to be able to compete right away, assuming they have their academics in order. It's more of a change/elimination of the rule as opposed to a lack of enforcement.
I'm not sure if I'd call transfer rules eligibility rules, but they're certainly intertwined because you have to be academically eligible on both sides of the transfer. The transfer process if more of a checklist that includes academic eligibility considerations, IMO. Perhaps that's me trying to find a difference without a distinction.
I won't be surprised if the idea of intra-season transfers becomes a legal matter at some point. I'm not sure it makes much logistical or practical sense for a player or coach - are we then cutting players from a roster mid-season to accommodate a transfer? - but people want to win and some people will try to win at all or any cost.
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