fmlizard
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I remember when academic ineligibility was a big part of college sports when I was an 80s kid. Prop 48. 5th year prep schools. Jucos. It was common for teams to lose a key player to class attendance, grades, low test scores, or other academic performance.
I can't remember the last time the Gophers lost a key player in a major sport to academics or we lost a recruit due to inability to qualify academically. This is great and could obviously be attributed to improved academic support and recruiting more academically inclined players.
However, it seems to be happening everywhere. I can't recall the last time I read a headline that a notable athlete in a major NCAA sport was ineligible due to academics, or wasn't able to get recruited because their grades were so bad.
Why do we think this is?
I can't remember the last time the Gophers lost a key player in a major sport to academics or we lost a recruit due to inability to qualify academically. This is great and could obviously be attributed to improved academic support and recruiting more academically inclined players.
However, it seems to be happening everywhere. I can't recall the last time I read a headline that a notable athlete in a major NCAA sport was ineligible due to academics, or wasn't able to get recruited because their grades were so bad.
Why do we think this is?
- Are student-athletes better prepared for college?
- Are schools doing better at supporting student-athletes?
- Are schools hiding athletes with poor academics in flimsy online classes and majors?
- Have standards lowered or rules changed?
- Have transfers helped sweep sketchy academics under the rug?
- Am I just imagining this because the Gophers are going through a good stretch in the classroom?