NCAA may delay academic changes to give black schools more time | Page 2 | The Boneyard

NCAA may delay academic changes to give black schools more time

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My gut feeling all along has been that the NCAA saw us as the ideal victim for their sham demonstration, showing the world they are serious about academics and that they are not afraid to come down hard on name schools (biggest joke ever).

I believe that they recently became aware of the fact that the new rule will punish a number of schools that they really don't care about one way or the other (traditional primarily black schools) and realized that the press generated by banning a significant number of these schools would create quite a bit if bad press for the NCAA and quite possibly put enough momentum behind complaints to start a public outcry, forcing them to scrap the new rule. The meeting (which led to this) was to find a way to avoid the above dilemma, the possibility of not enforcing the rules across the board was not intended to be made public this early.

It is my belief (nothing more than a gut feeling) that at some point further down the road (after we've been as completely gutted as possible) the announcement would have been made that in deference to the plight of the traditional black colleges, they will not enforce the rule (and in the process paint a picture of UConn being an undeserving beneficiary of the NCAA's benevolence). The tone of the revised statement makes it pretty clear to me that they realize the genie is out of the bottle, so now the rhetoric needs to paint UConn as the advantaged cheater looking for a pass ity doesn't deserve. The NCAA is painting a picture where if we do protest (or even apply for consideration) it will be akin to a multi-millionaire asking for food stamps.

My guess is that we will eventually be allowed in to the 2013 tournament but the NCAA will try to pile a load of dung on our reputation over the next few months before relenting.
 
Amazing, One little school from Cow country, can be hated so much.
 
we want whats fair and consistent with this country. first, the ncaa decides to make a rule retroactive. then, they decide that it will only be retroactive for certain schools. whats next? certain schools, well just uconn, has to play with only 4 players on the floor, and each player only gets 3 fouls? i mean, this is insane.

Next season, we'll see Emmert running onto the floor to reverse blocking fouls into charges against UConn, calling technicals for things like too many/not enough dribbles at the free throw line and so on.
 
So they kill our possible recruiting class, cause transfers and nba defections, and then say - oops - we'll not going to impose it this year. that. Sue. Now. I'll take the case for free (although I'm sure UConn has capable civil rights attorneys on their staff - if not - email me).
 
Maybe they will change their tune when they see the UCONN plans for the Al Sharpton Basketball Practice Facility and the new and improved Malcolm XL Center. Yeah...that's the ticket.

Don't forget the Jesse Jackson Court at Gampel Pavilion.
 
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Emmert: “When you look at a BCS program and the level of resources they have and the staffing they have, it’s a very, very different model”

So his point is that we had the resources if we wanted to use them, fine. What about the fact that they guy that failed to provide those resources just chaired his tournament committee?
 
Why does he have to say "a BCS program?" We all know who he's talking about. Emmert should just grow a set and substitute "UConn" for "a BCS program." Frickin' vajheen.
 
BCS means nothing when it comes to college basketball. If there are different standards, let them compete in a different division. The NCAA will be hammered if they do not universally enforce the rules, so in the end they will relent, but it may get ugly getting to that point.
 
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So they kill our possible recruiting class, cause transfers and nba defections, and then say - oops - we'll not going to impose it this year. that. Sue. Now. I'll take the case for free (although I'm sure UConn has capable civil rights attorneys on their staff - if not - email me).

Also, I'm going to bet that if they do push it off a year, they will wait until the after the Spring signing period, so that we won't have a chance to get any of the undecided blue chippers out there to consider UConn.
 
Advanced NCAA Logic (400 level)

Convoluted reasons not to use the most current APR scores + Aribitary reasoning for exempting every other affected institution = Nothing to see here.
 
If the NCAA decides to make an arbitrary exception and give these "low-resource schools" another year to adjust...but not UConn...then yes, UConn is pretty much guaranteed a victory in the court of law.

(Not that I'm expert, but I think they almost are anyway.)

UConn is already in the same group with UL-Lafayette which received a waiver, so this doesn't change much. They are essentially granting waivers to schools. We know UL already received such a waiver.
 
Folks, why is this a surprise? UL already received a waiver. They are a state school.
 
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"Emmert said the NCAA has offered to provide more money to low-resource schools for academic improvements."

I'd love to hear what this might be. Maybe money for a public relations firm available for each school? That might be an improvement.
 
You'd think if there was ever a time to give a school a waiver, it would be UConn. You know, considering their excellent scores over the past two seasons. It's kind of pitiful that the NCAA would rather use the older data even though UConn has made the current data readily available.
 
Emmert is either daring us to sue him, or he's going to relent on using current APR data. His position is too inconsistent to be sustainable.
 
Emmert is either daring us to sue him, or he's going to relent on using current APR data. His position is too inconsistent to be sustainable.
Cage match. Emmert vs. JC. JC gets to sub in KFree. After all, he is a coach.
 
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This "low resource" argument may work when discussing an inner city high school or something...but a college?

Give me a break.
 
I'd love to see some data showing the transfer and early entry rates at the "lower resource" schools compared to the "higher resource" schools.
 
This "low resource" argument may work when discussing an inner city high school or something...but a college?

Give me a break.

Inner city high schools have 2x as much money per student as some of the colleges in question.

Sad but true.
 
Kevin Duffy: NCAA adopts flexible APR transition for low-resource schools, spokesperson says

:mad:
 
I just despise double standards and that is what the NCAA is using in giving some colleges a break on their APR and others ie: UConn gets the shaft
 
Let's cut to the chase with the lawsuit. What's Herbst eMail address??
 
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