That's irrelevant to the number of women players on a team. Schools use practice players to provide a better and more physical level of competition. Having 15 players is more than enough, in terms of numbers, for practices. Whether or not Stanford chooses to use male practice players is a different issue.
If they are true walk-ons and clear of all scholarship issues then there are no problems whatsoever. If they are manipulations that is not fair. I fully expect Stanford is in full compliance. They would be foolish to do otherwise.
They are irrelevant because they are not potential players for the team to use on the court nor can they in any manner qualify against scholarships.
If they are true walk-ons and clear of all scholarship issues then there are no problems whatsoever. If they are manipulations that is not fair. I fully expect Stanford is in full compliance. They would be foolish to do otherwise.
oh, please: you know better. Male practice players cannot play in WCBB games. They are not recruited. They receive no scholarships. Next thing you know, you'll be saying that cheerleaders count towards football team numbers.
Irrelevant unless all those teams list those kids on their rosters. I know of none who do that.I know that. The issue was some posters poo-pooing (or saying it is embarrassing) for Stanford to have 19 players. Most schools use that many in practice.
I never thought there was. You'll note my posts were about the potential issues involved not what was happening. I fully expect Stanford is in compliance because it would be completely foolish to do otherwise.Yes, they are true walk-ons. How can you tell? Walk-ons cannot sign a Letter of Intent. Check out Stanford's press release here of the incoming freshmen.
The only players signed were Aly Beebe and Tess Picknell. If you look at this year's roster here, the other freshmen who aren't on that list are Denia Ebersole and Kiran Lakhian. Thus, we know those two are the walk-ons.
So for next year, we are losing Joslyn Tinkle, but gaining four more scholarship recruits, leaving the rest as walk-ons.
No manipulation here.
Wait a minute. Let's example what example was promised during the recruiting trip:
1) Four-year basketball scholarship from Stanford? Check
2) A degree from Stanford? Check
So where exactly did Vanderveer break her promise?
Irrelevant unless all those teams list those kids on their rosters. I know of none who do that.
What about the other three players that won't have a scholarship next year. I also suspect that Ruef anticipated she would get another year when she sat out for Medical reasons. Tara & Stanford didn't award her, because of the recruits they could sign.
19 seems awfully high, do all the players get to participate in practice or are some relegated to more watching? Not that all players deserve equal practice time. Just never thought 19 was necessary, even 15 seems high.
What about the other three players that won't have a scholarship next year. I also suspect that Ruef anticipated she would get another year when she sat out for Medical reasons. Tara & Stanford didn't award her, because of the recruits they could sign.
Nowhere in the discussion was that pertinent.ugh. I know the difference between walk-ons and male practice players. Again, my pt was that Tara uses her walk-ons vs. putting them on the bench to watch male practice players.
Nowhere in the discussion was that pertinent.
My post didn't say its written anywhere. However, you can bet all coaches make that promise otherwise why would a recruit go to a school if the coach said, I'll only give you a scholarship on a yearly basis and I might pull it, if I can sign a better recruit.
Again, what about those players? They are walk-on players. They were not recruited as scholarship players. So again, what promise was broken by the coaching staff?
As for Ruef, whether she anticipated getting a fifth year or not is irrelevant. She HAD to redshirt because she was injured. It's not relevant what she anticipated.
Ruef completed her four-year degree at Stanford under the promise Vanderveer gave Ruef and her family. No one knew if Ruef was going to come back for a fifth year until recently, because she hadn't gotten accepted into her masters program.
Again, it's not like Ruef had another year of her undergrad left and Vanderveer pulled the rug from beneath her. She has her degree. If she would like to come back for a fifth year, she'll have to pay her way through the masters program.
I can't help you understand it Ice.
when are all players ever healthy?
Never, nearly every other team gets by with some combination of 12-15 players though and Stanford has more talent than 99% of D1 teams. If any team needed 19 players it isn't a top 25 one.
That right one cannot explain the unexplainable.I can't help you understand it Ice.
Woops - thanks for the clarification - from reading the earlier posts I had thought Stanford was pulling scholarships from players that had received them. If the other three players are and were walk-ons to start with, I have no problems. (I did use 19 scholarship commitments at the beginning of that sentence because I thought that was the situation.) And as I said in the rest of the post - I think a player, their family, and a coach feel a scholarship offer is a 4 year commitment, not 5+ years, so I have no issue with 'pulling' a scholarship for a player who has already (or will have) graduated.How are those four players being treated unfairly? Vanderveer did not recruit them as scholarship players. She recruited them as walk-ons.
For a good, but not great basketball player, it is still an advantage to be considered a walk-on for the basketball team because it helps you get into Stanford since there isn't so much competition (you are applying super early, as opposed to when the rest of the United States is applying). They knew they weren't going on scholarship. So tell me again how they are being treated poorly?
So walk-ons get preferential treatment by Admissions? Sounds like a violation of some NCAA rule to me. Who do they think they are? UNC?How are those four players being treated unfairly? Vanderveer did not recruit them as scholarship players. She recruited them as walk-ons.
For a good, but not great basketball player, it is still an advantage to be considered a walk-on for the basketball team because it helps you get into Stanford since there isn't so much competition (you are applying super early, as opposed to when the rest of the United States is applying). They knew they weren't going on scholarship. So tell me again how they are being treated poorly?
So walk-ons get preferential treatment by Admissions? Sounds like a violation of some NCAA rule to me. Who do they think they are? UNC?