I'm sure they can say it.....and I'm sure TT could find a judge that would tell them they are not allowed to enforce it because that is how it works now.Can the NCAA just say that any game he plays in will be considered a forfeit by Texas Tech?
Just as solid of an argument as Sorsby's was.Conversely, the Gophers should sue and demand to be let in. Having never made it has caused our players and fans extreme emotional distress.
Maybe not, but the playoff committee can certainly "interpret" them as forfeits.Can the NCAA just say that any game he plays in will be considered a forfeit by Texas Tech?
Great! Just don't play them. Force TT to cut him.
I mean we are already seeing teams trying to bring in guys who have signed NBA contracts and played in the G League so it only makes sense that some team will try and bring in NFL guys that don't make rosters.Can Max Brosmer beat out Drake?
I think this is a bit different than the NIL stuff. Question is does NCAA have a rule/guideline on this that they can enforce. If it's in a handbook anywhere (and if it currently isn't, it will be going forward), the NCAA can probably make a suspension stick.I'm sure they can say it.....and I'm sure TT could find a judge that would tell them they are not allowed to enforce it because that is how it works now.
Fun fact, the judge that made the ruling on this injunction was a University of Houston grad; I believe the first team tech would play after the school imposed suspension would be Houston.
If at first you don’t succeed, sue, then sue gain, then keep suing…Looks like he got a temporary injunction that makes him eligible to play....
The NCAA has plenty of problems but how the hell will there ever be any sort of stability if everytime they try to enforce anything they just get sued and the player finds a football fan judge willing to let them play?
Not saying this doesn’t deserve pushback, but lol@ the sec AD constantly losing his mind over anything that threatens a SEC playoff spot for football.
I think we know who the Judge will be on.Fun fact, the judge that made the ruling on this injunction was a University of Houston grad; I believe the first team tech would play after the school imposed suspension would be Houston.
and "beyond college sports" means it doesn't get talked about on the football board.There’s zero accountability in this country anymore and it extends well beyond college sports.
Wow....I'm actually surprised the idea of not playing TT in any sport seems to have some actual legs, I figured that was just bluster.
It really is amazing how much things have changed in such a short period of time.In about 5 years, the NCAA and college sports have gone from stiflingly restrictive to the most anything-goes sport I can think of in the world.
Seriously. No drafts, hardly any restriction on player movement, no contracts, no collective bargaining agreement, no spending limits, you can go pro and come back, you can gamble on hundreds of college football games and not even get suspended, and the list goes on and on
Seems like I'm not the only one thinking this:Maybe not, but the playoff committee can certainly "interpret" them as forfeits.
would envision it is about integrity of the sport and signaling to the AD that having a player rostered who openly broke (arguably) the most serious rule as related to sport makes them believe your department doesn't have integrity, so why would we play against you when you're comfortable with that?Wow....I'm actually surprised the idea of not playing TT in any sport seems to have some actual legs, I figured that was just bluster.
That actually seems over the top to me....I mean the Sorsby thing is ridiculous but not sure why other sports at the school should get punished because the football team wants to bring in a guy who got busted for gambling while at a different school. Saying you won't schedule the football team makes sense, saying you won't play them in women's volleyball because of this seems pretty extreme.
I guess from that perspective that does make sense.would envision it is about integrity of the sport and signaling to the AD that having a player rostered who openly broke (arguably) the most serious rule as related to sport makes them believe your department doesn't have integrity, so why would we play against you when you're comfortable with that?
Personally, I think it makes sense as they're saying this is an athletic department issue rostering a player who openly gambles on his own team. Coming up with a 2 week suspension is vastly under the level of the misconduct given NCAA level punishment would result in a lifetime ban (it's written directly into their bylaws and they have had a very aggressive anti-gambling campaign so an athlete would know this). The school and team can still suspend him as I'd assume they have something in their code of conduct or athlete policy.