hoyahooligan wrote:Red Rooster wrote:NJRedman wrote:
Yeah! How dare kids try to get an education and work towards their dreams while a family member fights a terminal illness! Those little punks shouldn't even be allowed on campus! How dare they leave their dying family members bedside to even use the bathroom!
Heron's mom may not be dealing with a life-threatening situation, but it could be post-concussion syndrome where she may require regular medical attention. He's close enough to his hometown at St. John's to make the trip if needed. It's a legitimate scenario where he could very well be granted immediate eligibility. Knowing the NCAA, they'll probably deny the waiver.
The Johnnies and a few people close to the situation feel confident. Auburn and Bruce Pearl being supportive of his transfer, as I mentioned earlier, could also go a long way towards Heron's case.
NJ, rest assure 'hooligan is speaking on what he would like to happen. He's in no way being objective (not that I expected him to be anyhow). He doesn't in any way want Heron eligible and paired with the likes of Ponds, Simon and Figueroa in the backcourt. He lacks credibility. He generally has unjustified reasons and use miniscule samples to overinflate his team whilst disparaging other teams. If you're looking for objectiveness, then I suggest to not look in his direction.
The rule specifically states it has to be a life threatening situation. Hence my point that they would be bending a rule that I don't even think should exist in the first place to allow him to be eligible. I would say the same thing if he was coming to Georgetown or any other school. I'm a homer for my team, but that doesn't invalidate my point.
And I never said they shouldn't go to school or have to be by their bedside constantly, I'm just saying they should redshirt the year and focus on spending time with their family member while attending school, not flying halfway across the country every couple weeks. The rules for the waiver state the player is supposed to be playing some part in the day to day care of the family member, seems like that's hard to do between class, practice, games, and travel, especially in this case where he'll still be 80+ miles from his mom. It's not going to hurt your NBA stock to take some time off.
I was taught by former Dematha and hall of fame basketball coach Morgan Wooten that your priorities and commitments should be 1st to God 2nd to your family 3rd to your education/school work and then only 4th to basketball.
NJRedman wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:The rule specifically states it has to be a life threatening situation. Hence my point that they would be bending a rule that I don't even think should exist in the first place to allow him to be eligible. I would say the same thing if he was coming to Georgetown or any other school. I'm a homer for my team, but that doesn't invalidate my point.
And I never said they shouldn't go to school or have to be by their bedside constantly, I'm just saying they should redshirt the year and focus on spending time with their family member while attending school, not flying halfway across the country every couple weeks. The rules for the waiver state the player is supposed to be playing some part in the day to day care of the family member, seems like that's hard to do between class, practice, games, and travel, especially in this case where he'll still be 80+ miles from his mom. It's not going to hurt your NBA stock to take some time off.
I was taught by former Dematha and hall of fame basketball coach Morgan Wooten that your priorities and commitments should be 1st to God 2nd to your family 3rd to your education/school work and then only 4th to basketball.
No one cares what you learned at Dematha. Funny how God is before family though/
What if a parent has cancer that persists for years? Should they put off their aspirations for years? Your opinion and what your high school coach thought has no bearing on what people should actually do with their lives.
hoyahooligan wrote:NJRedman wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:The rule specifically states it has to be a life threatening situation. Hence my point that they would be bending a rule that I don't even think should exist in the first place to allow him to be eligible. I would say the same thing if he was coming to Georgetown or any other school. I'm a homer for my team, but that doesn't invalidate my point.
And I never said they shouldn't go to school or have to be by their bedside constantly, I'm just saying they should redshirt the year and focus on spending time with their family member while attending school, not flying halfway across the country every couple weeks. The rules for the waiver state the player is supposed to be playing some part in the day to day care of the family member, seems like that's hard to do between class, practice, games, and travel, especially in this case where he'll still be 80+ miles from his mom. It's not going to hurt your NBA stock to take some time off.
I was taught by former Dematha and hall of fame basketball coach Morgan Wooten that your priorities and commitments should be 1st to God 2nd to your family 3rd to your education/school work and then only 4th to basketball.
No one cares what you learned at Dematha. Funny how God is before family though/
What if a parent has cancer that persists for years? Should they put off their aspirations for years? Your opinion and what your high school coach thought has no bearing on what people should actually do with their lives.
Uh seeing as most of our institutions are catholic I don't think it's crazy that God is first. That's what you're supposed to believe as a Catholic.
And if something that's going to persist for years then there's no need to put off aspirations and there's no need to get a special waiver to be closer to home.
Don't let your hatred of me cloud the fact that the waiver is supposed to be for players to be close to home to help care for their family member with a life threatening disease. I don't know the facts about his mother's case, but what's been put out there on the internet is that she's suffering from some symptoms secondary to a concussion. That does not sound like a life threatening issue that the waiver was designed for. I'm not minimizing her issue assuming that's what she has, but it isn't something that's going to cost her her life.
As Irishdawg noted in the case with Brunk he put his family first and sacrificed basketball for his family. IMO (which the NCAA doesn't care about, but I am free to share here as that's the point of a message board) that's the right way to do things.
hoyahooligan wrote:NJRedman wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:The rule specifically states it has to be a life threatening situation. Hence my point that they would be bending a rule that I don't even think should exist in the first place to allow him to be eligible. I would say the same thing if he was coming to Georgetown or any other school. I'm a homer for my team, but that doesn't invalidate my point.
And I never said they shouldn't go to school or have to be by their bedside constantly, I'm just saying they should redshirt the year and focus on spending time with their family member while attending school, not flying halfway across the country every couple weeks. The rules for the waiver state the player is supposed to be playing some part in the day to day care of the family member, seems like that's hard to do between class, practice, games, and travel, especially in this case where he'll still be 80+ miles from his mom. It's not going to hurt your NBA stock to take some time off.
I was taught by former Dematha and hall of fame basketball coach Morgan Wooten that your priorities and commitments should be 1st to God 2nd to your family 3rd to your education/school work and then only 4th to basketball.
No one cares what you learned at Dematha. Funny how God is before family though/
What if a parent has cancer that persists for years? Should they put off their aspirations for years? Your opinion and what your high school coach thought has no bearing on what people should actually do with their lives.
Uh seeing as most of our institutions are catholic I don't think it's crazy that God is first. That's what you're supposed to believe as a Catholic.
And if something that's going to persist for years then there's no need to put off aspirations and there's no need to get a special waiver to be closer to home.
Don't let your hatred of me cloud the fact that the waiver is supposed to be for players to be close to home to help care for their family member with a life threatening disease. I don't know the facts about his mother's case, but what's been put out there on the internet is that she's suffering from some symptoms secondary to a concussion. That does not sound like a life threatening issue that the waiver was designed for. I'm not minimizing her issue assuming that's what she has, but it isn't something that's going to cost her her life.
As Irishdawg noted in the case with Brunk he put his family first and sacrificed basketball for his family. IMO (which the NCAA doesn't care about, but I am free to share here as that's the point of a message board) that's the right way to do things.
NJRedman wrote:I'm not Catholic and neither are many of the students at our institutions. Heck, Butler isn't even a catholic school.
The waiver isn't meant to sit at your family members bedside, it's to play basketball so you can be closer to home during a trying time. You're narrow minded view of a rule isn't what the NCAA depends on in this matter. Thank god for that, right?
adoraz wrote:I'd say 70% chance he is eligible. Is that overly optimistic? Probably. However, SJU insiders seem cautiously optimistic and they know more about this individual case than anyone on here. In the past they haven't fed us BS/false hope, so I believe them. Also, I read that if he isn't eligible, SJU plans to hire a lawyer to try to get the decision reversed. We saw last year that some teams like NCSU were able to overturn NCAA decisions after fighting.
I understand people being skeptical, but saying there's no chance whatsoever seems misguided (and in some cases, biased).
stever20 wrote:adoraz wrote:I'd say 70% chance he is eligible. Is that overly optimistic? Probably. However, SJU insiders seem cautiously optimistic and they know more about this individual case than anyone on here. In the past they haven't fed us BS/false hope, so I believe them. Also, I read that if he isn't eligible, SJU plans to hire a lawyer to try to get the decision reversed. We saw last year that some teams like NCSU were able to overturn NCAA decisions after fighting.
I understand people being skeptical, but saying there's no chance whatsoever seems misguided (and in some cases, biased).
The NCSU one that you're referring to is one where the kid took a summer school class at Ohio St. Hardly the same thing at all. Has there been a single case like Heron since they stopped doing the hardship waivers before the 2015-16 season where the kid was immediately eligible? I sure don't remember that at all. This would be a massive change in the course of things. I just don't see the NCAA wanting to have hardship waivers back as a normal situation, and really it's got to be all or nothing.
And frankly, I don't see what grounds SJU would have to sue to try to get him immediately eligible. The rules have been hard and fast here.
hoyahooligan wrote:I'll let you have the last word after this since I know you can't help yourself.
1) The point of my ranking of priorities was not religion the point was family should come before basketball. Just personal opinion has nothing to do with the NCAA rules just explaining why I think that waiver doesn't make sense to me. And why even if it would benefit Georgetown and we got a player eligible early ( as we actually did years ago with Julian Vaughn) I would still think that I'd rather the player take the time to be with their family and put basketball on the back burner while they deal with their school work and their family.
2) As for the 3.0 GPA rule. Yeah I wanted that to help my team. My issue with the sick family member waiver is that I think the players should be spending their time differently if they have a sick family member not that I think transfer shouldn't be able to happen. If Heron was applying for that waiver or a Graduate transfer waiver I'd be fine with it. Heck I'd be fine if they removed the year in residence restriction completely no matter what. I could care less about Heron becoming immediately eligible. I'm just expressing my personal opinion that 1) I'm not a fan of that type of waiver in the context of the current transfer rules and 2) I don't think Heron fits the criteria of the waiver he's applying for.
3) I could not care less who St. John's has on their roster. St. John's will still do nothing next year even if Heron is eligible. No post play and no coaching, and a culture of losing.
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