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dog eat dog world

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Ridiculous but this is the age and it isn't the first.

http://tracking.si.com/2012/07/26/eighth-grade-qb-tate-martell-commits-to-washington/?sct=obinsite
 
dog eat dog world said:
Ridiculous but this is the age and it isn't the first.

http://tracking.si.com/2012/07/26/eighth-grade-qb-tate-martell-commits-to-washington/?sct=obinsite

He looks good to Penn State.

Too soon?
 
Naturally, LSU has already done this...

http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/8199497/soon-8th-grader-dylan-moses-offered-lsu-tigers-scholarship

Although something seems amiss... the kid is about to start 8th grade, and is 14. I was 11/12 in 8th grade.
 
The NCAA has enough ******* rules about everything else all the way down to what your socks have to look like, how about this:

Neither a school nor a scholar-athlete may make a binding scholarship commitment until the student has completed five semesters of high school (i.e., midpoint of the junior year).
 
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Starman said:
The NCAA has enough ******* rules about everything else all the way down to what your socks have to look like, how about this:

Neither a school nor a scholar-athlete may make a binding scholarship commitment until the student has completed five semesters of high school (i.e., midpoint of the junior year).

Not really necessary. Commitments don't mean anything until the athlete signs the letter of intent. See: Newton, Cam.
 
Starman said:
The NCAA has enough ******* rules about everything else all the way down to what your socks have to look like, how about this:

Neither a school nor a scholar-athlete may make a binding scholarship commitment until the student has completed five semesters of high school (i.e., midpoint of the junior year).

They already have that rule

These sports arguments would rank high on my list of the most worthless. I verbally committed to Columbia when I was in seventh grade.
 
Kentucky basketball did this a couple of years back. In fact, would be interested to see a follow up on if the kid is any good in high school.
 
dixiehack said:
Kentucky basketball did this a couple of years back. In fact, would be interested to see a follow up on if the kid is any good in high school.

He's now in college, at tiny Sonoma State:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/varsitytimesinsider/2011/12/boys-basketball-michael-avery-commits-to-sonoma-state.html

Calipari pulled his scholarship offer the moment he was hired. Seems the kid peaked in 8th grade.
 
CA_journo said:
Naturally, LSU has already done this...

http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/8199497/soon-8th-grader-dylan-moses-offered-lsu-tigers-scholarship

Although something seems amiss... the kid is about to start 8th grade, and is 14. I was 11/12 in 8th grade.

You might have been 12 (and turned 13 in the fall) but I very much doubt that you were any younger than that. A person who graduates high school at 17 would have entered eighth grade at 12. The old "normal" was 13. The new "normal," especially for athletes, is to take an extra year whether by starting late or repeating a grade before the HS eligibility clock begins. I think Jimmy Clausen was 20 by the time freshman classes started at Notre Dame.
 
LongTimeListener said:
CA_journo said:
Naturally, LSU has already done this...

http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/8199497/soon-8th-grader-dylan-moses-offered-lsu-tigers-scholarship

Although something seems amiss... the kid is about to start 8th grade, and is 14. I was 11/12 in 8th grade.

You might have been 12 (and turned 13 in the fall) but I very much doubt that you were any younger than that. A person who graduates high school at 17 would have entered eighth grade at 12. The old "normal" was 13. The new "normal," especially for athletes, is to take an extra year whether by starting late or repeating a grade before the HS eligibility clock begins. I think Jimmy Clausen was 20 by the time freshman classes started at Notre Dame.

my kid is normal age for her class and is starting eighth grade. she's 13. will turn 14 in november.
 
Hey, there is an upside ... no matter what we write about him/her in high school, we're not costing him a scholarship!
 
HanSenSE said:
Hey, there is an upside ... no matter what we write about him/her in high school, we're not costing him a scholarship!

win-****ing-win!!!
 

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