Cardoso committed to Cuse | Page 2 | The Boneyard

Cardoso committed to Cuse

Do we know she didn’t qualify academically or is that just speculation
There has been some discussion in reports by media that she may have some work to do to qualify. Most has been related to either the ACT or SAT if I remember correctly.
 
Out here in sunny Southern California were it never snows (hail once in a while) because we’re in a basin at sea level, I cannot begin to fathom trying to live and negotiate my way around town in 124” of snow.

None of us own snow clearing equipment for obvious reasons, and the hardware stores in town don’t carry any either, no demand.

We have a lot of accidents when it rains because some folks can’t/won’t compensate for wet roads. Can you imagine if they had to try and drive on icy and slushy roads?:eek: The auto insurance rates here would sky rocket.
I live just south of the Hollywood Hills. Can you imagine those little, winding roads in the hills with ice? Los Angeles would be completely shut down.
 
Do we know she didn’t qualify academically or is that just speculation
We don’t know for sure. But back in September there were reports that she had not yet qualified just about the time the August results would have been available. The most recent test dates for the SAT’s and ACT’s were 10/5 & 10/26 respectively, so it’s possible that she earned a score sufficient to qualify for a scholarship.
 
If Cardoso hasn’t qualified yet, I’ll give Q some credit. The Cuse just edged mid-major Ohio in their opener the other night so it could be a long season. They need better players if they hope to compete with ND, Louisville and the other top programs in the ACC. He’s got nothing to lose by offering Cardoso a scholarship and everything to gain if she qualifies academically.

I was at the game. Please don't forget that Syracuse is without the services of their best player, and IMO, one of the top 3 PG's in the country, Tiana Mangakahia, who juts finished chemo for breast cancer. This will not be an easy season for Syracuse, but they have talent.
 
I live just south of the Hollywood Hills. Can you imagine those little, winding roads in the hills with ice? Los Angeles would be completely shut down.

The 124" is deceiving. It's not all on the ground at once. Snow falls, melts, blah blah blah. It's how much snow falls in an entire winter. The snow sucks, yes, but we are used to it and it's easily taken care of. Snow removal is actually quite the operation.
 
I live just south of the Hollywood Hills. Can you imagine those little, winding roads in the hills with ice? Los Angeles would be completely shut down.
I was at the game. Please don't forget that Syracuse is without the services of their best player, and IMO, one of the top 3 PG's in the country, Tiana Mangakahia, who juts finished chemo for breast cancer. This will not be an easy season for Syracuse, but they have talent.
I appreciate that, and the Bobcats are a tough mid-major, but when you’re supposed to be a nationally ranked team out of the ACC, losing one player should not be a reason to be in a nip and tuck game at home vs an unranked team.
The 124" is deceiving. It's not all on the ground at once. Snow falls, melts, blah blah blah. It's how much snow falls in an entire winter. The snow sucks, yes, but we are used to it and it's easily taken care of. Snow removal is actually quite the operation.
I’m sorry, but the snow doesn’t just fall and melt in Syracuse, which is extremely cold from late Nov to mid-March. Frequently, the new snow just piles up on top of the old snow. It was not uncommon for the snow banks at the front of my house to be 3-6’ high for weeks on end.
 
.-.
Remember those winters, people tunneling to get out of their houses, and laughing when people said to me “you’re from Colorado. You’re used to snow.” “Yeah,” I replied. “Melting.”
It's one of the reasons i'm glad I'm in South Carolina. We get a little winter, but each house is equipped with a solar snow removal system. It snows over night, looks pretty in the morning when I call work that I can't make it in. Then all gone by 10:00 :)
 
Out here in sunny Southern California were it never snows (hail once in a while) because we’re in a basin at sea level, I cannot begin to fathom trying to live and negotiate my way around town in 124” of snow.

None of us own snow clearing equipment for obvious reasons, and the hardware stores in town don’t carry any either, no demand. If you want snow here, you have to go to it (near by mountains - lots of ski resorts there), it won’t come to you.

We have a lot of accidents when it rains because some folks can’t/won’t compensate for wet roads. Can you imagine if they had to try and drive on icy and slushy roads?:eek: The auto insurance rates here would sky rocket.
Some parts of the Vegas valley gets snow once or twice a year, and when it happens the accident rate sky rockets. I've lived over 36 years in areas that received a lot of snow and ice and more than half of that I drove in, so a little bit is nothing.
 
I grew up in the "Maryland Mountains" (the Appalachians) and while we aren't Buffalo or Syracuse, we would average anywhere from 4 to 6 feet of snowfall over a typical winter, and we received our fair share of lake affect snow. We got our heaviest snow falls from nor'easters when the moisture from the Atlantic storms mixed with cold air over the Appalachian structural front. I learned how to drive in snow and it doesn't bother me to drive in it. However, staying out of the way of the other idiots who don't know what they are doing makes it a hair raising (if I had any) experience!

The biggest issue here in the Baltimore-Washington metroplex is that people don't know how to drive in snow but they still feel they have to get somewhere so they go out, get stuck, abandon their cars and make it that much more difficult for snow removal crews to get the roads clear.
 
.-.
Some parts of the Vegas valley gets snow once or twice a year, and when it happens the accident rate sky rockets. I've lived over 36 years in areas that received a lot of snow and ice and more than half of that I drove in, so a little bit is nothing.

Yeah, I made the mistake of visiting Vegas during one it’s worst winters once. I didn’t enjoy the experience. It’s a fact that Vegas has “extreme” weather twice a year. 118 degrees in the dead of summer is not unusual. Neither is single digit temperatures in the winter months. Vegas is only 3 hours away for us. We visited our granddaughter (a student at UNLV) year round. We experienced both first hand. :confused:
 
Yeah, I made the mistake of visiting Vegas during one it’s worst winters once. I didn’t enjoy the experience. It’s a fact that Vegas has “extreme” weather twice a year. 118 degrees in the dead of summer is not unusual. Neither is single digit temperatures in the winter months. Vegas is only 3 hours away for us. We visited our granddaughter (a student at UNLV) year round. We experienced both first hand. :confused:
The hottest temperature ever recorded in Vegas is 117 which was reached at 4:07 PM on June 20, 2017. The average high temperature in July is 104. 118 would be unusual in that it would break the all-time temperature record. 110-112 is probably about the extent of their hottest days of the year.
 
We don’t know for sure. But back in September there were reports that she had not yet qualified just about the time the August results would have been available. The most recent test dates for the SAT’s and ACT’s were 10/5 & 10/26 respectively, so it’s possible that she earned a score sufficient to qualify for a scholarship.
Which is why I shut up about it and waited to see what shook out. I'm surprised 'Cuse and their coach The AcCuser landed such a big one. From my vantage it seems most of the big name places just weren't willing to risk leaving a scholly open in case she fell flat on her face in her exams. Q was willing because honestly, it was a safe bet for him. For Cardosa it wasn't any port in a storm, but it was clearly the best option open to her. Now, the question is, did she get her scores back already?
 
Something doesn't seem right. Could it be the grades/test score problem? Strange destination for someone from sunny Brazil (?)- frozen Syracuse.
 
I used to live in Syracuse. If you’re not going to play basketball, not sure why anyone would want to face the brutal Syracuse winter where the average snowfall is 124”.
My son teaches at a college in the area. He’s been there for about 10 years. They’ve had a few years since he’s lived there where we in CT had more snow when we’ve been hit my a few Noreasters and the lake effect was a bit to the North up there. Coach Q lives very near my son. My son did post doc at VTech and says Blacksburg is more sophisticated than Syracuse.
 
Yeah, I made the mistake of visiting Vegas during one it’s worst winters once. I didn’t enjoy the experience. It’s a fact that Vegas has “extreme” weather twice a year. 118 degrees in the dead of summer is not unusual. Neither is single digit temperatures in the winter months. Vegas is only 3 hours away for us. We visited our granddaughter (a student at UNLV) year round. We experienced both first hand. :confused:
Scoop?
 
.-.
Something doesn't seem right. Could it be the grades/test score problem? Strange destination for someone from sunny Brazil (?)- frozen Syracuse.
No. Syracuse was on her list of schools from the very beginning. The current 'Cuse roster has players from Canada, France (3), Australia, Czech Republic & Latvia so she'll fit right in.
 
The hottest temperature ever recorded in Vegas is 117 which was reached at 4:07 PM on June 20, 2017. The average high temperature in July is 104. 118 would be unusual in that it would break the all-time temperature record. 110-112 is probably about the extent of their hottest days of the year.
That's the official temperature which is taken at (LAS) McCarran International airport, the Southern Sumerlin area has been known to get up to 122 degrees, but it's not considered to be the official temperature.
 
My mother's two brothers moved from Connecticut to Syracuse in the '50s We would go visit them when I was growing up in the '60s and '70s. One year, when Veteran's Day fell on a Monday, we drove up for a long weekend. They got a hell of a snow storm that actually shut down the New York State Thruway. We were stranded, yet my cousins still had school and my uncles opened their restaurants. It was business as usual. I remember walking out in the neighborhood and noticing that people had different clothes and footwear than I was used to seeing. There were lots of jeeps, which was not the norm in those days. And my brother and I were thrilled every time a snowmobile flew by.
 
I guess she could walk on, but who pays her tuition? Mom & dad? Student loans perhaps? No doubt Hillsman will figure something out.
The base question: If she isn't academic qualified where does she go to build up entrance requirements? Many Women or Men players have JV'ed and as @oldude pointed out more JV's until there isnt any more. Academics are not as easily attained if attained not so easy to fudge your way through other courses. Geno has had one or two that were academically unqualified (but qualified) and sat while not passing courses. It's not an easy fraud to pull off.
 
.-.
My mother's two brothers moved from Connecticut to Syracuse in the '50s We would go visit them when I was growing up in the '60s and '70s. One year, when Veteran's Day fell on a Monday, we drove up for a long weekend. They got a hell of a snow storm that actually shut down the New York State Thruway. We were stranded, yet my cousins still had school and my uncles opened their restaurants. It was business as usual. I remember walking out in the neighborhood and noticing that people had different clothes and footwear than I was used to seeing. There were lots of jeeps, which was not the norm in those days. And my brother and I were thrilled every time a snowmobile flew by.
When I walked 15 miles each way to school in Connecticut I wore artic (over boots) heavy sox, double layer of pants, Mackinaw (over coat over sweater and shirt, long-johns, hat with ear covering and mandatory scarf and mittens (gloves will freeze your finger). Ok I never walked to school but the rest is true. So, Cuse isn't much different than CT in those dark bad days of Connecticut--that were great fun. In Watertown, I rode my cousins Snowmobile--flipped over a few times.
 
As a transplant from CT to VA, I couldn’t agree with you more.
Not totally true. I a ct transplant to Va questioned why when a dusting of snow occurred they close schools. It's the people that live in the high country. Va has narrow country roads, with 55 mph speed, so it's for safety.
4 wheel drive is the norm. I had trouble buying a truck without 4 wheel drive.
My first winter in Va I had 2 snow storms of 24 inches and a few since. Most are 5 inches or less and last a day or 2
 
When I walked 15 miles each way to school in Connecticut

Okay it wasn't 15 miles but I had to walk about a mile to the bus stop when I was a little guy. We were out of town a fair bit, on a big orchard, in what is already a very rural area. It probably wasn't up hill both ways, but it felt like it. :rolleyes:
 
.-.

Forum statistics

Threads
168,052
Messages
4,551,184
Members
10,433
Latest member
lkcayoho1


Top Bottom