What probably happened is that she went outside the care she was receiving through UT, and by NCAA rules UT is not allowed to pay for that.What is Texas’ reasoning for not paying? Was there some kind of agreement that they would?
I believe she was injured playing for team USA. There she be some provision to cover injuries occurring when playing for the national team. She should never have been billed even if the hospital had to forgive the debt.I have one additional simple question. Would she still have received this $22K bill had she decided to stay at Texas. If not, then Texas did her dirty IMO.
Credible sources aware of Prince's situation have shared that she allegedly reinjured her leg during a non-basketball-related incident while at Texas. That might be at the crux of the refusal-to-pay issue.I believe she was injured playing for team USA. There she be some provision to cover injuries occurring when playing for the national team. She should never have been billed even if the hospital had to forgive the debt.
Unfortunately, it does matter where and when she got hurt. I get that Prince is angry and frustrated, but it’s not clear in my mind that TX owns the responsibility here.It doesn't matter where she got hurt or when. This sort of heavy expense for anyone is just wrong. Universities should be required to take out insurance for all of their athletes, and to pay for continuing care after college. They should not get to use a kid's body, but then expect the parents to pick up the bill off their insurance. Think football, and the almost 100% rate of injuries over four years. Think about all the women athletes who tear their ACL's, then face knee replacements from age 30 and over.
Something is very wrong here.
There will be a lot of people watching carefully how the remaining $22k bill gets paid. Oregon and its boosters will need to steer clear of what could be a NCAA violation waiting to happen.Set a "Go Fund Me" account. I am sure some PAC-12 fans here will help you.