Football question

Isn't the NCAA fighting the Chambliss ruling?

Maybe OU is playing this smart and saying hey, if we get the injunction ruling this late (before the draft, one week), the NCAA cannot challenge that in good faith because he'll have missed the draft.

They are supposed to rule on Chambliss before the draft, I believe. The NCAA would not have the chance to challenge on Owen before the draft. Just a thought.
Sure they are. And they may win at some point, but when? During the season? The Alabama pro bball player getting yeeted was good for the sport and the NCAAs. Their wins should have been vacated tho Imo.

Well see. The chambliss case is massive and I'm prolly rooting for the inept ncaa...
 
Except for the Trinidad Chambliss case currently (no juco exception), which is for a 6th year of eligibility and Pavia's which was for a 6th year (juco). QB Chandler Morris is seeking a 7th year now. Montana linebacker Solomon Tuliaupupu has been granted a 9th season of college football in 2026

Juco vs. playing lacrosse is seen by some on here as vastly different, I do not follow that logic at all.
his was MEDICAL ..
 
Trying to get the Mateer discussion to this thread rather than the coaching carousel thread (not sure how it got sucked into that discussion) -- I am always skeptical of the numbers because they aren't public and they are always rumors. Sure, people can ballpark it, but no one really knows, unless it is a very rare situation where the player and school both publicly disclose it (and I am not aware of any cases like that). I'm not sure why some people who question the numbers regarding our basketball NIL are so quick to think they know what Mateer makes.

In any event, he better play a hell of a lot better next season, whether he is making $5 or $5M.
He is not a 5 million dollar hit to OU NIL.
 
And?

Also, Owen tried that angle too so hes in the same boat then..

Honestly I have more sympathy for 15 mins of lacrosse counting as a season than I do a medical injury taking a season FWIW.
I don't agree with that last point. Injuries are part of sports, sure, but they are largely out of a player's control. Whether it was 15 minutes or not, he knew the rule that taking the field would count as a year. Whether that rule is stupid/unfair is one question, but it was the rule. And he chose to play. I understand that he doesn't appear to be a guy taking advantage of anything, and that he probably would have preferred to play football from day one if he had legit offers to do so, but every college athlete for decades has known that by taking the field/court, you are burning a year unless you get a medical redshirt. Obviously the lawsuits and JUCO stuff that have popped up the past couple years have changed a lot of things, but he did make the decision to play.

Think of it this way: if Holst had chosen to play 15 minutes of basketball this season, that would burn a year for him. He knows that, and it's obviously why he decided to redshirt. Does it really matter that in Owen's case, he played his 15 minutes in a different sport than his current one?
 
I don't agree with that last point. Injuries are part of sports, sure, but they are largely out of a player's control. Whether it was 15 minutes or not, he knew the rule that taking the field would count as a year. Whether that rule is stupid/unfair is one question, but it was the rule. And he chose to play. I understand that he doesn't appear to be a guy taking advantage of anything, and that he probably would have preferred to play football from day one if he had legit offers to do so, but every college athlete for decades has known that by taking the field/court, you are burning a year unless you get a medical redshirt. Obviously the lawsuits and JUCO stuff that have popped up the past couple years have changed a lot of things, but he did make the decision to play.

Think of it this way: if Holst had chosen to play 15 minutes of basketball this season, that would burn a year for him. He knows that, and it's obviously why he decided to redshirt. Does it really matter that in Owen's case, he played his 15 minutes in a different sport than his current one?
Meh.

To me, yes.
 
And?

Also, Owen tried that angle too so hes in the same boat then..

Honestly I have more sympathy for 15 mins of lacrosse counting as a season than I do a medical injury taking a season FWIW.
his court filing does not try to claim a lost medical RS for that season ..

it is basicaly .. that year shouldn't count ... because ..
 
I don't agree with that last point. Injuries are part of sports, sure, but they are largely out of a player's control. Whether it was 15 minutes or not, he knew the rule that taking the field would count as a year. Whether that rule is stupid/unfair is one question, but it was the rule. And he chose to play. I understand that he doesn't appear to be a guy taking advantage of anything, and that he probably would have preferred to play football from day one if he had legit offers to do so, but every college athlete for decades has known that by taking the field/court, you are burning a year unless you get a medical redshirt. Obviously the lawsuits and JUCO stuff that have popped up the past couple years have changed a lot of things, but he did make the decision to play.

Think of it this way: if Holst had chosen to play 15 minutes of basketball this season, that would burn a year for him. He knows that, and it's obviously why he decided to redshirt. Does it really matter that in Owen's case, he played his 15 minutes in a different sport than his current one?
and this also applies to Jones last season ..
 
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