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Post by nellynel on Jan 13, 2022 15:35:15 GMT -5
Ok I will clearly flag my sarcastic jabs for now on. your tone in that post didn’t even seem sarcastic at all. Hmm a post for a team with like 1 OH bringing on 5th MB didn’t seem sarcastic? Even a little.
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trojansc
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Post by trojansc on Jan 13, 2022 15:35:48 GMT -5
Could someone with one year left graduate then take a year off and not be enrolled in any college. and then go to get their masters and play a year somewhere? i think someone could do something like this based on your scenario: 2018 - 1st year to compete (1st season window) 2019 - 2nd year to compete (2nd season window) 2020 - whether played or not played, no eligiblity used, does not count towards 4 years to compete in 5 year window
2021 - 3rd year to compete (3rd season window) graduated 2022 - YEAR off (4th season window) 2023 - graduate year, 4th year to compete (5th season window)
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Post by Deleted on Jan 13, 2022 15:41:32 GMT -5
Could someone with one year left graduate then take a year off and not be enrolled in any college. and then go to get their masters and play a year somewhere? i think someone could do something like this based on your scenario: 2018 - 1st year to compete (1st season window) 2019 - 2nd year to compete (2nd season window) 2020 - whether played or not played, no eligiblity used, does not count towards 4 years to compete in 5 year window
2021 - 3rd year to compete (3rd season window) graduated 2022 - YEAR off (4th season window) 2023 - graduate year, 4th year to compete (5th season window) The covid year basically gave every athlete a six calendar year window to get their seasons of participation in, I believe is how it technically it works.
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Post by azvolleydad on Jan 13, 2022 15:42:03 GMT -5
Idk if she is gonna be transferring but OU and their assistant coach just started following Taylor Trammell which is interesting considering they r more recently following only people within the transfer portal Credit where credit is due.
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Post by coldsnap on Jan 13, 2022 15:56:26 GMT -5
Taking the Covid exception out of the equation. An athlete’s clock starts at the first full time enrollment. That clock is 5 years to play 4. The only way a person could take a year off and re-enroll and play is if they graduated in 3 years and used that 5th year to play their 4th season. This does not take into consideration any medical hardship waivers etc.
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Post by Anonymousnow on Jan 13, 2022 16:00:13 GMT -5
Could someone with one year left graduate then take a year off and not be enrolled in any college. and then go to get their masters and play a year somewhere? Yes, if they went on a religious mission. Otherwise the clock does not stop. Although I think it might stop for active military duty but I really can’t remember.
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Post by knapplc on Jan 13, 2022 16:08:55 GMT -5
Taking the Covid exception out of the equation. An athlete’s clock starts at the first full time enrollment. That clock is 5 years to play 4. The only way a person could take a year off and re-enroll and play is if they graduated in 3 years and used that 5th year to play their 4th season. This does not take into consideration any medical hardship waivers etc. Do religious missions provide an exemption?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 13, 2022 16:12:44 GMT -5
Taking the Covid exception out of the equation. An athlete’s clock starts at the first full time enrollment. That clock is 5 years to play 4. The only way a person could take a year off and re-enroll and play is if they graduated in 3 years and used that 5th year to play their 4th season. This does not take into consideration any medical hardship waivers etc. Do religious missions provide an exemption? Probably. There are quite a bit of things that can fall under the "hardship waiver" rule, which extends your clock. Beyond just season ending injury, and including things like military service I believe.
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trojansc
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Post by trojansc on Jan 13, 2022 16:16:05 GMT -5
Taking the Covid exception out of the equation. An athlete’s clock starts at the first full time enrollment. That clock is 5 years to play 4. The only way a person could take a year off and re-enroll and play is if they graduated in 3 years and used that 5th year to play their 4th season. This does not take into consideration any medical hardship waivers etc. Do religious missions provide an exemption? In the scenario I posted, that would certainly be interesting. A 2018 freshman competes that year, clock starts. They graduate in 2021 and would have 2 year window left to compete one more season. That would mean (from my understanding) they could hypothetically take a religious mission in 2022, take 2023 off, and compete in 2024. Crazy.
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Post by rrvbfan on Jan 13, 2022 16:27:13 GMT -5
Taking the Covid exception out of the equation. An athlete’s clock starts at the first full time enrollment. That clock is 5 years to play 4. The only way a person could take a year off and re-enroll and play is if they graduated in 3 years and used that 5th year to play their 4th season. This does not take into consideration any medical hardship waivers etc. Do religious missions provide an exemption? yes. Take Britton covey (Utah football). I think he’s got 10 years to play 5 with covid. 😂😂 (sarcasm). But yes. The clock stops with the religious mission.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 13, 2022 16:30:40 GMT -5
Update: Penn State, nor Purdue will make the 2022 NCAA Tournament. But Long Beach State will! Bite your tongue.
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Post by vbjustice on Jan 13, 2022 17:55:30 GMT -5
Woah, Taylor Trammell in the portal what... I thought she was virtually a guaranteed starter next year wow I wonder if she was disenchanted from losing her starting spot this past season.
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Post by ilalum92 on Jan 13, 2022 18:04:20 GMT -5
Do religious missions provide an exemption? In the scenario I posted, that would certainly be interesting. A 2018 freshman competes that year, clock starts. They graduate in 2021 and would have 2 year window left to compete one more season. That would mean (from my understanding) they could hypothetically take a religious mission in 2022, take 2023 off, and compete in 2024. Crazy. We have Ellie Holzman at ILL - Frosh year (red shirt), soph year (Covid), junior year (Injury - Medical Redhshirt, hopefully) finally plays next year. Will she get 6 or 7 possibly?
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trojansc
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Post by trojansc on Jan 13, 2022 18:08:29 GMT -5
In the scenario I posted, that would certainly be interesting. A 2018 freshman competes that year, clock starts. They graduate in 2021 and would have 2 year window left to compete one more season. That would mean (from my understanding) they could hypothetically take a religious mission in 2022, take 2023 off, and compete in 2024. Crazy. We have Ellie Holzman at ILL - Frosh year (red shirt), soph year (Covid), junior year (Injury - Medical Redhshirt, hopefully) finally plays next year. Will she get 6 or 7 possibly? I would think that Holzman could play 2022, 2023, 2024. 2025 if the medical redshirt is granted. If she graduated college in 3 years (not unheard of for exceptional students) she could actually be using her 1st year to compete as a graduate student. Insane.
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Post by babybacksets on Jan 13, 2022 18:20:30 GMT -5
Was it this most recent freshman and sophomore class of players the group that couldn’t do any on campus/in person recruiting trips? Wondering how much this is factoring into current transfers but also unsure of how many underclassmen have been the ones transferring.
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