outofyourmind
Oklahoma Sooners
Anyone post the number of grad transfers per year yet, nationally, and where did they go.
Graduating from minor league sports is typically to the professional ranks?Honestly, what’s the argument for not allowing them to transfer after they graduate?
Not really.It becomes free agency.
There is an art form to get a tiddly to wink. It takes semesters to master the art.I mean graduating in advanced tiddlywinks is still graduating.
Not really.
Students with a diploma have fulfilled their end of the contract.
Went looking and found this.
No idea if it's accurate or whatever.
Shows about 120 Grad transfers.
Looks to be maybe 7-10 who moved up to way better schools.
The vast majority look to be lateral moves or downward moves.
You decide.
2018 Committed Transfers
^^^ Isn't the only reason we call them a bunch of tranniesOnly shock about Oregon being on that list is they only have 4 this year.
Seriously, they have become grad tran U in the Pac.
Only shock about Oregon being on that list is they only have 4 this year.
Seriously, they have become grad tran U in the Pac.
Ummm that's backwards.
The students end of the deal is they play football and sign over their amateur career to the school/NCAA.
The schools end of the deal is they provide the education.
If the student has graduated, then it's the school that has kept up their end of the deal. The football career is still left unpaid for.
Especially considering the schools put in tons of effort in getting these kids to class and graduating early.
The whole grad student thing is they are supposed to have a grad program that the original school doesn't offer, has nothing to do with somehow filling a contract.
If they want to allow it to happen, then that's fine. But people seem to have a warped sense of who is owed what these days.
Btw, contracts being fulfilled and being free to go anywhere is the definition of free agency.
Then they need to also force the school to be tied to the player for the last year. Plenty of teams push away players who have graduated to move on.If the student got an education and graduated while playing football, then both parties kept their end of the deal.
If the student still has eligibility left, then I can see why entering a new contract with a different school would seem reasonable.
They could have just changed the rule to be eligibility is tied to one school and make the issue go away.
If the student got an education and graduated while playing football, then both parties kept their end of the deal.
If the student still has eligibility left, then I can see why entering a new contract with a different school would seem reasonable.
They could have just changed the rule to be eligibility is tied to one school and make the issue go away.
If the student got an education and graduated while playing football, then both parties kept their end of the deal.
If the student still has eligibility left, then I can see why entering a new contract with a different school would seem reasonable.
They could have just changed the rule to be eligibility is tied to one school and make the issue go away.
I don't see how a kid graduating is keeping up his end of the deal. Like...not even a little. It's good for them and all that, but that was their reward.
The students end of the deal is they play football and sign over their amateur career to the school/NCAA.
The schools end of the deal is they provide the education.
Ok, so what wa
The student's end of the deal is to play football while getting an education.
Education done = football done
If the kid has eligibility left and want more education from another school, that's between the kid and the other school.
But it's not "Education done = football done", because they are transferring to another school. Which is why they have to have a grad program not at the original program to qualify. Otherwise they have to stay at their current school.
Weren’t you one of the ones that stated scholarships are yearly contracts? That is contradicting what you are stating now.
Scholarships are yearly, the rules of the NCAA are not.
Rules of the NCAA?
If we are arguing a scholarship is a one year commitment then a prospect is more than living up to the commitment that he signed up for, regardless if that is 3 years or 4 if he graduates. How would it not be?