adoraz wrote:I'm not for over hyping, but if Heron is eligible next year... I'd expect the team to be Top 25 at some point.
The more I read about this situation, the more I think that Heron will never play a minute for St John’s or anyone else. Consider the facts:
1. The NCAA did away with these kinds of waivers in 2015.
2. Heron’s mother is not suffering from a terminal illness, but from the aftereffects of a concussion she suffered a year ago.
3. Heron so badly wanted to return north to be close to his mother that he entered the NBA draft.
This seems to be a textbook example of the kind of abuse that the NCAA was trying to eliminate 3 years ago. Let’s look further.
4. Heron clearly has his sight set on the NBA.
5. Transfers normally occur due to a lack of playing time.
6. Heron was not lacking for playing time.
Why would a player so anxious to get to the NBA that he files for the NBA draft after his sophomore season, then decide to sit out a season, thereby derailing the progress of his career? What’s to be gained?
Obviously there’s no good reason to pursue such a plan and there’s nothing to be gained.
This situation has all over it the fingerprints of someone advising the player and the player following that advice. Someone advising him poorly, I might add. Such a “godfather” seems to be operating under the assumption that he can scam the NCAA and is looking for a college desperate enough to be his co-conspirator. I don’t expect that he will succeed with this scam.
So, what next?
Assuming that the appeal fails, will Heron really sit out a year at St John’s or anywhere else? I can’t imagine that he will. More likely is that we will find him playing in the D-League. The other possibility is that we’ll find out how sincere he is about being close to his mother, meaning that he might just turn up in Europe next year.
An interesting side plot in this soap opera is UConn, the natural landing spot for a Connecticut kid who wants to be close to home. But UConn’s complement of scholarships for next year is full. The chance to get even one year of a player of Heron’s caliber would make it worthwhile for a school to bully some poor kid out of his scholarship to create an opening for Heron. UConn’s done it before. It might be worth keeping an eye on UConn to see how serious they think Heron is and how good they think his chances are of gaining the waiver.