Just my $.02, but I don't see how this really impacts UCONN in a negative way. Geno has significantly changed his coaching of freshman since Megan's first year. The way he treated Christyn and Olivia, and then Aubrey and Anna, was far different from how Megan was coached.I was hoping they would allow it.
Seems right to me.
1. It would create total chaos.
2. Since we don't even know if there's going to be a basketball season yet, those one-time waivers could be totally squandered in the end. And you better believe if that happened, student-athletes would inevitably start asking for another one...
Good point.The NCAA is going to have personnel cuts soon. With the large number of student-athletes transferring, I would be very surprised if they do not allow all transfers to play right away for the 2020-21 season. The man hours to review every case and the backlash from those not granted instant eligibility is not worth it for them.
The NCAA is going to have personnel cuts soon. With the large number of student-athletes transferring, I would be very surprised if they do not allow all transfers to play right away for the 2020-21 season. The man hours to review every case and the backlash from those not granted instant eligibility is not worth it for them.
Except for some NCAA sports that allow immediate participation, they are consistent.As long as they're consistent. Waivers for all, or waivers for none. Not for anyone, not for any reason. Not even for favored schools.

Snark aside from Centerstream (Trust me, I love snark more than most), the NCAA does allow all other sports the ability to transfer without penalty. From a Football and Men's Basketball perspective with Apparel/Shoe and the money generated, I understand the concern about "shadiness" for WCBB and Hockey, I have no idea why the NCAA puts restrictions on them.Except for some NCAA sports that allow immediate participation, they are consistent.![]()
The difference is by replacing the swishy "hardship" guidelines with a bright line rule (1 time no sit out rule) you have a clear guideline that is applied equally. I think that is all anyone is asking for.It already is becoming chaos, I don't see opening up a 1 freebie rule as making things that much more chaotic. If a player is unhappy, they're likely going to transfer whether there's a 1 year rule or not IMO. Also, most other NCAA sports don't penalize for transfers and all have lower transfer rates than basketball.
Very good analysis.I'll bet the lower level schools (outside of the P5) and perhaps some of the lower P5 schools joined to block it because they would just become farm teams for the big boys. The latter will still take the premium recruits but will fill in the gaps by cherry picking players they originally didn't want that the lower level schools invested in and developed. The NCAA basketball tournament is exciting because of the periodic upsets where a non-major that carefully developed a compatible veteran roster beats a power full of young superstars. That would go away because the non-majors won't be able to keep their best players and the majors will use them to add upperclassmen.
I agree. If an athlete decides that a particular school they chose was just not right for them, they should be able to transfer ONCE! However, allowing them to be paid when they are clearly amateurs, NOT professionals is absurd! What is the NCAA thinking?So, allowing players to transfer one time without sitting is bad, but allowing players to be paid so long as they don't wear their school gear is good.
Sigh, it's like the NCAA uses a random generator to make decisions.
An education should be first and foremost. But if an athlete gets a taste of money too early, it will clearly cloud their judgement when deciding when they turn pro! Not getting their degree can very well determine how their life will be spent 
The NCAA is going to have personnel cuts soon. With the large number of student-athletes transferring, I would be very surprised if they do not allow all transfers to play right away for the 2020-21 season. The man hours to review every case and the backlash from those not granted instant eligibility is not worth it for them.
I'll bet the lower level schools (outside of the P5) and perhaps some of the lower P5 schools joined to block it because they would just become farm teams for the big boys. The latter will still take the premium recruits but will fill in the gaps by cherry picking players they originally didn't want that the lower level schools invested in and developed. The NCAA basketball tournament is exciting because of the periodic upsets where a non-major that carefully developed a compatible veteran roster beats a power full of young superstars. That would go away because the non-majors won't be able to keep their best players and the majors will use them to add upperclassmen.
I’m glad someone else was thinking this. I’m all for student athletes getting paid if schools, networks, and the NCAA are going to make money off of their likeness, but the board saying a one time transfer rule is bad for student athletes is total bs to me. How will it make life for student athletes worse in any way? That logic makes no sense me.So, allowing players to transfer one time without sitting is bad, but allowing players to be paid so long as they don't wear their school gear is good.
Sigh, it's like the NCAA uses a random generator to make decisions.
Wouldn’t it make more sense to do partial scholarships or get rid of the scholarships and/or sports altogether if the thought is those recruits are an investment (that are already costing them more money than they make the school) rather than a student athlete?UConn is an exception, but most D1 schools lose money on basketball. Many of those programs take in second-tier recruits and try to develop them while giving them scholarships worth $50k to $75k per year. To allow the ones they do effectively develop to simply abandon the program as a free agent prior to their most productive years is not fair to the school that lost a lot of money on their freshman and sophomore scholarship. It would introduce more chaos to a system already out of control.
Cl, see my post to answer your question. I'll give you a hint. Money.So, allowing players to transfer one time without sitting is bad, but allowing players to be paid so long as they don't wear their school gear is good.
Sigh, it's like the NCAA uses a random generator to make decisions.