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UConn Athletics
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Two Georgia Tech men’s basketball boosters provided impermissible benefits...
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[QUOTE="intlzncster, post: 3282491, member: 56"] The main problem has nothing to do with the school itself. It has to do with sneaker companies/agents/handlers, and boosters funneling money/benefits. None of the above solves this. The reason being, the NCAA can't force any of those private parties to testify/document their activities. The only reason they know about all this stuff now is because of the FBI. So the real issue is, the NCAA can't actually police any of these activities. What about kids who can't cut it academically, and are forced to transfer due to being ineligible? If they stay on the team, it's punished by the NCAA. If they leave the team, it's punished by the NCAA. 1. So any kid who transfers can't get a scholarship for 1 year? That punishes kids for being poor. No poor student athlete could afford to transfer. 2. This part makes no sense and is just anti-kid. What is it accomplishing? Why shouldn't the kid be able to practice? One of the main reasons kids transfer is they need to develop. It doesn't actually help the school much for the kid to do so. 3. I get that and could probably get behind it. Waivers are granted for too arbitrary of reasons as it is. [/QUOTE]
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Two Georgia Tech men’s basketball boosters provided impermissible benefits...
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