I think what Jay is stating is correct in that you won't find any recent examples of the appeal process working in the athletes favor. But there is going to be an appeal process and Hud was just stating he didn't see why Jamal Robinson would not get his RS-year back. I was leaning more positive on his chances, but the more you look for recent examples of an athlete winning an appeal under the same circumstances the more I keep coming up with none. Jay is correct as per the 30% rule as others have posted as well.
ACtually, no I'm not correct.
This is crazy. There are two ways to calculate this thing. And, you come up with two different answers......
1. You play 12 games. A player plays in four games. That's 33%.
2. You play 12 games. You multiply by 30% and that's the number of games you can play in. In this case, it's 3.6. The NCAA says round up.
That's four games.
I'm doing an article right now on this whole thing. I'll link it when I'm done.
im not syaing he isnt, but thats the point of an appeal is to build your case. if he wants us to give him some personal aspect of jamal robinsons life or his schooling or whatever then i cant help. i dont think any case is the exact same. if it was so cut and dry, i would think the coaches would already know the answer, specifically the guy on our staff that is supposedly a guru at eligibility.
Well, he has played in two complete games and 2 first halves, so the comes out to 3.0 games does it not? If that is the case, it leaves him below the 30% or 4 game threshold. In either case, the appeal has to be filed and the process has to run its course. To me it matters not who is right, but what happens with the appeal and the NCAA's final decision.
This can all be remedied by making it a % of how many plays an athlete played that year. Takes away A LOT of the guessing game. Set it at 33%, because if you played anymore than a 1/3 of your teams plays for the year, then you don't get the appeal.
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