LeBron has 4 years, he always said he would have liked to play with Melo.Melo's got three years of eligibility by my count.
Having the first father son sports duo in college sports would be incredible.
And Melo and LeBron can be our interim coaches, after all they would be running the offense.LeBron has 4 years, he always said he would have liked to play with Melo.
Keep LeBron far away from the program.LeBron has 4 years, he always said he would have liked to play with Melo.
I think that would be awesome.Wow! I know college FB and BB are a crapshow but I didn’t think it would get this bad. What’s next, retired NBA players on college teams?
"I don't want LeFlop playing for Syracuse!" -your uncle on FacebookLeBron has 4 years, he always said he would have liked to play with Melo.
I wouldn't be surprised!Wow! I know college FB and BB are a crapshow but I didn’t think it would get this bad. What’s next, retired NBA players on college teams?
This Wild, Wild West keeps getting wilder!
It wasn't long ago that the concept was to share tee shirt revenue with a player to make sure he wasn't being used by the money grabbing schools and the NCAA. It was a fair concept that has gone way beyond any sense of reasonableness or proportion.A former NBA draft pick being immediately eligible to play college basketball is absurd even by today’s anything goes standards. The NCAA has turned eligibility into a loose suggestion. This crosses into outright nonsense. Transfers are pretty much automatic now, fine that’s the era we’re in. But this isn’t a transfer. This is someone who literally went through the NBA Draft process and is now strolling back into college basketball like it's some kind of rec league. It makes a mockery of whatever “line” is supposed to exist between college and professional basketball.
Of course Baylor and most colleges are members of the NCAA, so this supposedly is what the schools.This has been one of the stupidest things the NCAA has done. Just disband these fools.
No, I am saying it has always been a circus. There are examples from the first day of collegiate competition. This is just the latest iteration. Everybody was chasing a buck from day one and it continues today. The greed of the schools is what has now resulted in acknowleged professionals playing for colleges and universities. I liked the good old days too, you know when SU might have had one televised game. Those days are gone forever. And it is not for everyone.Your response has nothing to do with the point. Dragging out 1800s rowing scandals and some Pitt QB doesn’t justify a former NBA draft pick waltzing back into college hoops. That’s not corruption, that’s just nonsense. There’s supposed to be a line between college and professional basketball. Going through the NBA Draft process and then walking right back into college with zero delay erases that line completely. Eligibility rules are a joke. You’re talking about ancient history like it somehow excuses this circus but it doesn’t.
From the "first day of collegiate competition" is an overreach. Since college sports in the 50's, college sports has become more of a fan favorite and a money maker of sorts. Along with that came the inevitable cheating (money and other perks to the top level players) which undermined the whole concept of amateurism.No, I am saying it has always been a circus. There are examples from the first day of collegiate competition. This is just the latest iteration. Everybody was chasing a buck from day one and it continues today. The greed of the schools is what has now resulted in acknowleged professionals playing for colleges and universities. I liked the good old days too, you know when SU might have had one televised game. Those days are gone forever. And it is not for everyone.
Read up on “tramp athletes” and Edgar Glass the SU tackle who moved up to play for Yale. This is just a return to the good old days. They have made college athletics great againFrom the "first day of collegiate competition" is an overreach. Since college sports in the 50's, college sports has become more of a fan favorite and a money maker of sorts. Along with that came the inevitable cheating (money and other perks to the top level players) which undermined the whole concept of amateurism.
But to say that today's world of openly paying all levels of talent in an extremely overpriced market is a natural extension of those years is a reach too far. Players today are hired and fired on a yearly basis, and the ones who are looking for greener pastures just hand in their notice and move on. That concept is unique to today's world only.