ADVERTISEMENT

D1 Board Statement on Transfer Waivers

"The NCAA is aware of violent – and possibly criminal – threats recently directed at committee members involved in regulatory decisions. The national office is coordinating with law enforcement and will continue to do whatever possible to support the volunteers who serve on these committees.

The Division I Board of Directors believes that NCAA staff and the committee are applying transfer waiver guidelines as intended by member schools and giving proper and full consideration to individual cases, including consulting a panel of licensed mental health experts for cases in which mental health is cited as a reason for transfer. The DI Board last year directed the DI Council to refine the guidelines for transfer waivers and apply those guidelines to the 2023-24 academic year. These new guidelines were supported unanimously by all 32 Division I conferences in January, and prior to that were widely supported by member schools and coaches associations.

Academic data demonstrates that transferring typically slows student-athletes' progress toward a degree, especially with those who transfer later. It stands to reason that multiple transfers would further slow time to a degree. Citing extenuating factors, such as mental health, does not necessarily support a waiver request but instead may, in some situations, suggest a student-athlete should be primarily focused on addressing those critical issues during the initial transition to a third school.

The DI Board Administrative Committee was briefed Monday on the current status of transfer waivers for this academic year. There are 21,685 student-athletes who entered the transfer portal this year. The bulk of those transfer students are first-time transfers who enrolled at their first schools and are now immediately eligible to compete at their new schools – which was the intent of the transfer rule change. Of those who entered the portal, 3% would be multiple time transfers who would require a waiver to compete immediately for this academic year if enrolled at a new school.

The DI Board is troubled by the public remarks made last week by some of the University of North Carolina leadership. Those comments directly contradict what we and our fellow Division I members and coaches called for vociferously – including UNC's own football coach. We are a membership organization, and rather than pursue a public relations campaign that can contribute to a charged environment for our peers who volunteer on committees, we encourage members to use established and agreed upon procedures to voice concerns and propose and adopt rule or policy changes if they are dissatisfied."

When You Finally Realise How Much President Trump Actually Accomplished In His Four Years...

WarNuse

When You Finally Realise How Much President Trump Actually Accomplished In His Four Years In The Oval Office, Despite Being Surrounded By Traitors On A Daily Basis Doing Everything In Their Power To Ruin His Presidency, You Might Start To Appreciate The Hardest Working President In U.S. History.

93 is a wonderful number.....

since I am 93 years old today. That makes it 76 years since I enrolled at WVU in Sept. 1947. Several years ago I chronicled those days in a thread titled "The Old Bogeyman Looks Back". Among other things I mentioned that tuition and fees were $47.00 per semester, room rent was $5.00 per week and food was $8.50 for 20 meals a week. The football schedule included such great teams as Otterbein, Geneva and Case Reserve.

My thanks to Vernon and Keenum for this great board. I visit numerous times during each day to keep uip with Mountaineer sports. I do however wish that it would be a kinder, gentler board. It seems that now it is infested by a new breed of "fans"that delight in spouting forth only snide, snarky remarks against Coach Brown and President Gee. Ah well, perhaps this too shall pass.

I will now get down of my soap box, hitch up my Depends and go to the kitchen and see if my Pablum is juussstt right. I'm kidding--I am still active enough to go the gym twice a week and play 9 holes of golf a couple times a week. And you might not want to get in a putting contest with me. Me nickname at my home course is "The Blade"' So, until next year
when I check out number 94--Let's Go Mountaineers!!

Watched a condensed version of the Pitt-Cincy game.

1. Pitt's right tackle, #78, is very very bad in pass blocking. He got beat multiple times for a sack. He had pre snap movement that wasn't called probably 6 or more times. He knows he's getting beat off the edge, and he false starts and still gets beat.

2. Pitt's QB is very frustrating. He's basically does all the bad stuff Doege did, but faster.

3. Pitt has two good RBs and a phenomenal TE that we have already seen.

4. Pitt's defense had a lot of trouble with FB/TE lead blockers in the run game and pass game behind the LOS.

My suggestion? Let Martin eat up the RT, send a LB rushing behind him, and run 12 personnel on offense.

Vegas odds for

first coach to be fired in 2023:

Jimbo Fisher (Texas A&M) 4/1​

Butch Jones (Arkansas State) 5/1​

Danny Gonzales (New Mexico) 5/1​

Tony Elliott (Virginia) 5/1​

Neal Brown (West Virginia) 6/1

Tom Allen (Indiana) 7/1​

Jeff Haley (Boston College) 9/1​

Dino Babers (Syracuse) 10/1​

Justin Wilcox (California) 10/1​

Dana Holgerson (Houston) 12/1​

Brent Venables (Oklahoma) 16/1​

Eliah Drinkwitz (Missouri) 16/1​

Ryan Silverfeld (Memphis) 20/1​

Democrat mayor spanked by drag queen wants to destroy police, prisons, claims Marxism is real 'American Dream'

Marxists, socialists and communists aren't even trying to hide it anymore. @Soaring Eagle 74, @moe and @bamaEER. Care to discuss your votes for this $h!t?

Democrats, their policies and their bleaters are destroying our country

Fact check: Biden falsely claims he was at Ground Zero ‘the next day’ after 9/11


Washington CNN —

In a speech to service members and first responders on the anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, President Joe Biden falsely claimed that he was at Ground Zero the day after the Twin Towers fell in Manhattan.

Biden, returning from a whirlwind trip to Asia, said in his Monday remarks at a military base in Alaska: “I join you on this solemn day to renew our sacred vow: never forget. Never forget. We never forget. Each of us – each of those precious lives stolen too soon when evil attacked. Ground Zero in New York – I remember standing there the next day, and looking at the building. And I felt like I was looking through the gates of hell, it looked so devastating because of the way – from where you could stand.”

Facts First: Biden was not at Ground Zero the day after 9/11. He actually went to Ground Zero nine days after the attacks.


Asked Monday night about the claim, the White House provided a photo and article showing that Biden, then a senator for Delaware, toured Ground Zero on September 20, 2001. A White House official then emailed this comment on condition of anonymity: “The President first visited the World Trade Center nine days after the September 11 terrorist attacks as part of a bipartisan delegation from the Senate.”

As The New York Post noted on Monday, Biden wrote in a 2007 memoir that he “headed back to the Capitol” on September 12, 2001. He spoke that day in the US Senate.

Another false claim about his own past​


It’s possible, of course, that Biden genuinely misremembered when his visit to Ground Zero occurred. As president, though, he has repeatedly made false claims about his past.

He did it three times in a single speech last month – falsely claiming to have witnessed a bridge collapse in Pittsburgh in 2022 (he actually visited the site more than six hours after the collapse), falsely claiming his grandfather had died just days prior to his own birth at the same hospital (his paternal grandfather died more than a year prior in another state), and again repeating a long-debunked false story about a supposed conversation with an Amtrak conductor who was deceased at the time the story would have had to take place.

In 2021 and 2022, he falsely claimed to have been arrested during a civil rights protest (he had previously said merely that an officer had taken him home from a protest), falsely claimed he “used to drive an 18-wheeler” (the White House said he once had a job driving a different vehicle, a school bus), falsely claimed to have visited the Pittsburgh synagogue where worshippers were killed in a 2018 mass shooting (he had spoken to its rabbi by phone but had not gone), falsely claimed to have visited Iraq and Afghanistan as president (he made repeated visits as a senator and vice president but not as president), told a false story involving a late relative and the Purple Heart, and falsely described his interactions decades ago with late Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir.
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT