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JC did a great job getting KO here. Kevin Ollie to me is a premiere coach who I would not trade for ANYONE.
I see it as the polar opposite of the one and done. A kid who completed 4 years of coursework, earned his degree and earned the right to pursue their masters degree and basketball future wherever they want. If they can come in and add to the UCONN legacy I see them as every bit as much a part of the UCONN family as anyone else. Am I less of a part of the UCONN family because I only spent 3 semesters there? No way. The transfers either.. The graduate transfer rule is sort of the mirror image of the one and done, and even when it might make my favorite team better for a year, it sure doesn't add up to me to what a "program" used to be. .
Chief00 said:Jim has his personal view but if he was coaching today he would do what was needed to compete.
Love the man and usually agree with him, but he's wrong here imo.
Miller had no choice because of the Ivy League rules. Gibbs graduated, too. I struggle to see how one-and-dones are better, when attending college was merely a charade until they can jump to the NBA. Better for the coach? Yes. Better for the student-athlete? No.
I don't even see why Larrier is in the conversation. He has to sit a year, just like Calhoun says he wants. So did Purvis.
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that his view is 100% slanted to sympathize with the the coach who lost a good player, but I don't like the servitude/property connotations that necessarily follow from his point of view. And it's really bad for the players.
He's delusional if he doesn't think he'd be the king of transfers under the same circumstances.
UconnFanNVa said:I just dont get the line of thinking on this 5th year transfers sitting out. First off its the perfect offset to the 1 and done epidemic. So unless the NCAA is going to do something about that at the same time i dont think you touch 5th year transfers. Secondly, its being suggested that they sit out a year.... Ok so how does that work? If you are in a masters program that is 2 years I guess thats not a big deal. If its a 1 year program, what do you do? Make sure you only take a few classes so that you can still be full time for next season? Delay school for a year? Furthermore, if they do sit out for a year, now you are a 5th year senior that when he becomes eligible is now a 6th year senior! So people will complain that they are too old and physically more developed than younger kids. Its just not a good solution. I think alot of this goes back to coaches feeling like these kids owe them something.... They dont! You promise them the world to come and play at your school. Then things dont shake out the way you said they would or the kid just doesnt like how things are going. they should be able to leave. Sit out a year and transfer. They deserve to put themselves in the best situation for them and their families if you ask me. Just like i can leave one job and go to another if i feel another job is a better fit for me or benefits me more.
I agree with him from a purity of a sport standpoint. Yes, they graduate and have a year to use where they choose. But for a coach to have a player he expects to have for 4 years play 3 and then use the last one as basically a mercenary year for another program, that has to be frustrating. Don't counter this with Shonn Miller. I don't think that is the way college sports are supposed to be, but its the way they are currently, and its not necessarily something negative.
Pretty funny to be references Fred Hoeberg, who literally just "transferred" to the Chicago Bulls a day ago too.
Guess he'll be sitting out a year before stepping on the sidelines... oh wait.
I disagree. Where is the misinterpretation? He made comments critical of fifth year transfers and transfers in general, specifically referenced UConn, its current transfers and percentages, and then tried to avoid the only logical conclusion one could possibly draw from his comments. If he didn't want them to be applied to UConn, he should have kept his mouth shut (fat chance, I know).It seems that many are misinterpreting his comments in the very manner he predicted when making them . . .
I could see Howie's point, but I thought the whole point of the graduate transfers was they can play right away at another school IF their current school does not offer the graduate program they want to enroll in and they still have a year of eligibility remaining.In the Courant article on this, Dickenman comments: "If you spend four years at a school, and you have another year, you should spend the extra year at that school. Why change? The school gave you a scholarship, serviced you for four years, I think you owe it to that school. That's my opinion..." Having trouble wrapping my mind around the idea that somehow the player owes the school an extra year of their life.
PS - the use of the term "serviced you" is just plain awkward. Just saying.
I could see Howie's point, but I thought the whole point of the graduate transfers was they can play right away at another school IF their current school does not offer the graduate program they want to enroll in and they still have a year of eligibility remaining.
I still think people are misrepresenting what he is saying.
As a fan, I dislike the fact that transfers are as prevalent as they are, notwithstanding the fact that it has obviously helped UConn recently. But my dislike of the transfer in high volume does not mean I do not support the rights of players, or that there are not many instances in which a transfer is beneficial to both parties. I don't think any less of a kid like Samuel or Lubin, nor do I think less of the multiple transfers we have brought in. I don't think JC does, either, but that doesn't mean it is a positive development for the game when player-coach relationships are as fickle as they currently are.
Couple of things come to mind but the big thing from players point of view must be playing time orYou gotta ask why they are so fickle? Honestly for a kid that isnt a grad student (5th year transfer) and you have to sit out a year, why would you put yourself through that? You have to really think that coach and or school's situation isnt a good fit for you and your future. If they are willing to take a 1 year hit just to switch schools, and its not just a few kids its a lot. What is going on?
In the Courant article on this, Dickenman comments: "If you spend four years at a school, and you have another year, you should spend the extra year at that school. Why change? The school gave you a scholarship, serviced you for four years, I think you owe it to that school. That's my opinion..." Having trouble wrapping my mind around the idea that somehow the player owes the school an extra year of their life.
PS - the use of the term "serviced you" is just plain awkward. Just saying.