OT: - NCAA proposed change in CBB window (yay!) | The Boneyard
.-.

OT: NCAA proposed change in CBB window (yay!)

BRS24

LisaG
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
5,564
Reaction Score
35,307

Under the proposals, the Division I women's basketball notification-of-transfer window would open April 6-20. The men's notification-of-transfer window would open April 7-21.
Rationale for making the modifications to the notification-of-transfer windows in basketball includes the desire by both committees to wait until after the championships have concluded.
 

Under the proposals, the Division I women's basketball notification-of-transfer window would open April 6-20. The men's notification-of-transfer window would open April 7-21.
Rationale for making the modifications to the notification-of-transfer windows in basketball includes the desire by both committees to wait until after the championships have concluded.
I'm glad they're making this common sense change. The existing format essentially penalized teams for playing late into the tournament.
 
I'm glad they're making this common sense change. The existing format essentially penalized teams for playing late into the tournament.
In the WttP podcast, Geno laughed and said there has to be tampering going on, as how does a kid announce a new school within days of the portal opening, so the primary thing that this rule change will eliminate is all the announcements after the tourney 2nd round. It won't delay any tampering, however there won't be any huge media waves of high profile players opting for the portal while the tourney is still going on.
 

Under the proposals, the Division I women's basketball notification-of-transfer window would open April 6-20. The men's notification-of-transfer window would open April 7-21.
Rationale for making the modifications to the notification-of-transfer windows in basketball includes the desire by both committees to wait until after the championships have concluded.
It is amazing how rare it is for a collection of college bureaucrats to do something the rest of us clearly see is the intelligent thing. And how long it takes them to get there.
 
It is amazing how rare it is for a collection of college bureaucrats to do something the rest of us clearly see is the intelligent thing. And how long it takes them to get there.
Let's count the myriad of ways for not making a quick, efficient business decision for a change.

In over 40 years of management consulting experience with Fortune 100 companies one or more of the following is the usual culprit.

1. Lack of clear information
2. Fear of making the wrong decision (risk aversion)
3. Analysis paralysis
4. Overload of options
5. Poor communication
6. Poor and inefficient decision-making processes
7. External pressures against a change
8. Bureaucratic hurdles with multiple layers of hierarchy
9. Indecisiveness due to incompetence
10. Delay and slowness to move forward in a "group think/decision" structure
11. Need to find the "perfect"solution

... and you can probably add more. In any event, a change has been made. Now let's see how effective it is.
 
.-.

Online statistics

Members online
590
Guests online
9,460
Total visitors
10,050

Forum statistics

Threads
165,495
Messages
4,441,064
Members
10,304
Latest member
MUFan in CT


Top Bottom