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No gunner kiel
Sure its not AL thread?
No gunner kiel
Did anyone else read this and want to say hello to Mr. Vanderdoes?
The LOI ONLY guarnatees the recruit a scholarship for ONE year (Most people assume it's for four, but, that is actually incorrect. The school can renew or choose to not renew each year)...
But the kid is penalized for a period that , in a way, exceeds that...After that Freshman year is up, the school can choose, unilaterally, to not renew...BUT, if the kid wants to go elsewhere, he is penalized with loss of eligibility.
There is an alternative. A recruit MAY actually sign a "Grant-in-Aid" agreement and be awarded an athletic scholarship. He would still hjave to deal with NCAA transfer rules once enrolled, but, in situations such as Eddie's, he would be free to NOT enroll and then go wherever he wants and be immediately eligible...
This is one of the main reasons that such releases are usually granted...or that the appeals are usually won...
The NCAA does not want to get into a legal battle over the enforceability of the Letter of Intent system.
Again (since someone again posted saying Notre Dame should "block" UCLA), there is an enforceability issue, legally, with restricting a release...AND there may be an enforceability issue with the LOIs as a whole. (Lots of other issues I won't get into here).
The NCAA does not want controvery on these issues. They want to manage there systems themselves...and that requires keeping themselves out of court--which would set REAL precedent.
As to "other coaches calling and urging Notre Dame to stand firm": I think that is complete bs...Coaches have all sorts of interest in these things--on both sides of the ledger...They WANT transfers AWAY from their rivals--and TO their schools...They DON'T want transfers AWAY from their programs and TO their rivals' schools... There are two sides to every coin...I doubt any coaches really care about calling Notre Dame and offering support one way or another...You think Kelly was calling SC to tell them to hold steady and not release Carlisle?
My Irish friends,
I’ve been lurking here…. . . . Old friends, former high school team mates, family members, etc. attend and play for different schools. You cannot really restrict them from communicating.
Bottom line here is that we are already actually pretty far along in the process. I’d be 99.9 percent sure Eddie will not be attending Notre Dame…and 90% sure he WILL be at UCLA. And I think it will all come down pretty quickly from here on out. I don’t think it’s my personal bias here…I think it should be pretty well universally acknowledged by those who know at least a bit about the case.
Good luck next season. Beat $C…
ND has always offered 4-year scholarships. A commitment by an elite academic institution to grant you an undergraduate degree in return for athletic services is hardly a bad deal for the recruit.
ND doesn't do this, so it really isn't relevant to this argument.
Schools like ND, who don't take JuCos and rarely accept transfers, cannot easily replace athletes who suddenly decide they'd rather be elsewhere. The commitment goes both ways.
"Usually"? Very few athletes are released from NLOIs, and in virtually all of those situations, there are extenuating circumstances. To the best of our knowledge, there's nothing at work here but a "change of heart" by Eddie.
Not really. There are definitely some aspects of the NCAA system that are manifestly unfair to student athletes, but the NLOI isn't one of them. It's a basic contract, under which both parties provide consideration. A recruit would have a very hard time proving NLOIs are unconscionable, or getting an NLOI nullified on some other legal ground.
You're not a lawyer, are you? Because your understanding of the legal issues involved here is pretty poor.
There are many areas in which the NCAA would prefer to avoid legal scrutiny, but NLOIs aren't one of them.
As I mentioned above, ND very rarely accepts transfers, and never accepts JuCos, so we have a much greater interest in binding athletes to their schools than in facilitating their transfers. But then again, we don't tamper in the recruitment of athletes who have already signed NLOIs, so Mora's staff probably feels differently on this issue.
There is an alternative. A recruit MAY actually sign a "Grant-in-Aid" agreement and be awarded an athletic scholarship. He would still hjave to deal with NCAA transfer rules once enrolled, but, in situations such as Eddie's, he would be free to NOT enroll and then go wherever he wants and be immediately eligible...
This is one of the main reasons that such releases are usually granted...or that the appeals are usually won...
The NCAA does not want to get into a legal battle over the enforceability of the Letter of Intent system.
Again (since someone again posted saying Notre Dame should "block" UCLA), there is an enforceability issue, legally, with restricting a release...AND there may be an enforceability issue with the LOIs as a whole. (Lots of other issues I won't get into here).
The NCAA does not want to get into a legal battle over the enforceability of the Letter of Intent system.
Again (since someone again posted saying Notre Dame should "block" UCLA), there is an enforceability issue, legally, with restricting a release...AND there may be an enforceability issue with the LOIs as a whole. (Lots of other issues I won't get into here).
The NCAA does not want controvery on these issues. They want to manage there systems themselves...and that requires keeping themselves out of court--which would set REAL precedent.
So, Eddie and his family had an option to sign a "grant-in-aid" but chose to sign the LOI instead? Doesn't that bolster ND's argument with regard denying his release?
Whiskeyjack,
First of all, I AM a lawyer--35 years of practice and counting...I don't think I need to give you my entire resume, but I have studied the NCAA rules and reguilations in detail for a few reasons...and I think my understanding of su8ch is a little better than that "poor" mark you threw out there... likely much better than your understanding...
As to Notre Dame only offering four -year scholarships...that is not true...
In PRACTICE, most schools typically renew most scholarships for the length of a player's college career provided they don't otherwise give reason for the schools to want to part ways...BUT LEGALLY, the papers that Notre Dame and EVERY other NCAA university uses to sign up the players commits the school to just ONE year...
UCLA relies, almost exclusively, on high school recruiting...Very few JC players going back many years...It is an extreme rarity...Not that many transfers as well--as I said, Mora has taken only the one in his tenure...Notre Dame has taken transfers as well (See Amir Carlisle)...The "holier than thou" attitude doesn't work...
And, again, UCLA DOES NOT 'tamper" with anyone else's players. If you have actual evidence of that, other than imagination or the repeated assumptions and assertions of disheartened Notre Dame fans, I'd love to see it.
Let's talk about what the LOI actually DOES mean...
Interesting thing is that it is NOT to the benefit of the recruit...
Sooner or later, recruits will start catching on to this...
The LOI ONLY guarnatees the recruit a scholarship for ONE year (Most people assume it's for four, but, that is actually incorrect. The school can renew or choose to not renew each year)...
But the kid is penalized for a period that , in a way, exceeds that...After that Freshman year is up, the school can choose, unilaterally, to not renew...BUT, if the kid wants to go elsewhere, he is penalized with loss of eligibility.
There is an alternative. A recruit MAY actually sign a "Grant-in-Aid" agreement and be awarded an athletic scholarship. He would still hjave to deal with NCAA transfer rules once enrolled, but, in situations such as Eddie's, he would be free to NOT enroll and then go wherever he wants and be immediately eligible...
This is one of the main reasons that such releases are usually granted...or that the appeals are usually won...
The NCAA does not want to get into a legal battle over the enforceability of the Letter of Intent system.
Again (since someone again posted saying Notre Dame should "block" UCLA), there is an enforceability issue, legally, with restricting a release...AND there may be an enforceability issue with the LOIs as a whole. (Lots of other issues I won't get into here).
The NCAA does not want controvery on these issues. They want to manage there systems themselves...and that requires keeping themselves out of court--which would set REAL precedent.
In the end, I would not be at all surprised if Notre Dame completely dropped any challenge to the appeal. That would keep everything within the NCAA's purview and out of the judicial system.
As to "other coaches calling and urging Notre Dame to stand firm": I think that is complete bs...Coaches have all sorts of interest in these things--on both sides of the ledger...They WANT transfers AWAY from their rivals--and TO their schools...They DON'T want transfers AWAY from their programs and TO their rivals' schools... There are two sides to every coin...I doubt any coaches really care about calling Notre Dame and offering support one way or another...You think Kelly was calling SC to tell them to hold steady and not release Carlisle?
So do we really know any new information?
haha... So is it likely that Eddie's request to be denied?Bruin Steve is a lawyer who has never coached or played big time football...
haha... So is it likely that Eddie's request to be denied?
Give Niklas a $5000 gift card to China Buffet and move him back to DL.
yeah but he'll be hungry again in an hour.
Even if he comes in and guts out a year at ND, I don't want him playing.
If he bites the bullet and shows up for camp, I bet he'll stick around. He picked ND for a reason. We just need a chance to remind him why.
UCLA relies, almost exclusively, on high school recruiting...Very few JC players going back many years...It is an extreme rarity...Not that many transfers as well--as I said, Mora has taken only the one in his tenure...Notre Dame has taken transfers as well (See Amir Carlisle)...The "holier than thou" attitude doesn't work....
Freaking battle of the attorneys right now...