forestlaker
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So:
1. Do I treat an athlete's behavior different than the rest of the student body?
2. Is losing an scholarship better or worse than losing tuition money that a person has had to work a summer job in order to afford to go to school?
3. Does coming from a poor/unstable background allow me to be treated differently than coming from a two parent stable background?
4. Should coaches only recruit kids from outstanding homes becasue the chances of messing up maybe less?
Hard questions without easy answers.
1. Do I treat an athlete's behavior different than the rest of the student body?
2. Is losing an scholarship better or worse than losing tuition money that a person has had to work a summer job in order to afford to go to school?
3. Does coming from a poor/unstable background allow me to be treated differently than coming from a two parent stable background?
4. Should coaches only recruit kids from outstanding homes becasue the chances of messing up maybe less?
Hard questions without easy answers.
Never said they were bound that's why I offered my opinion on what they should do, not what they're legally bound to do. But I stand by my opinion. Schools make millions off of these kids and throw them out like leftovers when something goes wrong. Obviously there's personal accountability involved and criminal behavior kind of trumps everything but there's something that doesn't sit right with me about how these kids get thrown away so easily. There's the aspect of having to fit within a team culture and structure as well as a university one, and I get that there are requirements placed on those that are on scholarship and those that publicly represent the school. That said, we recruit a kid like McNeal from a crappy background with almost no stability for years (went to multiple prep schools and both parents have passed). We tell him that this is his 'family' and his new support system, and then when he screws up (royally if the allegations are true), its 'don't let the door hit you'. I know its not realistic to keep a kid on scholarship when he's no longer on the team due to criminal behavior nor is it realistic to expect a coach to hold a spot for a player for a year under criminal investigation, but it still doesn't sit well with me the ease at which schools just discard a kid, especially those that aren't convicted of crimes or only plead to minor crimes