He signed with USC, then they let him out to go to texas for the spring and then back to usc in the fall, somewhere in there had to be the free waiver. Then went to UT where he got yet another waiver. I think the "one time" waiver will go away and just be a free for all. knoxnews.com/story/sports/college/university-of-tennessee/2022/08/22/usc-bru-mccoy-eligibility-tennessee-football/7863544001/
Has it been confirmed by a certain few contributors here that really are in the know that UF has passed on McCall?
I heard yesterday that it's the fallback position of "He can't get thru the admissions process." My question was, "If he's been in college for three years, what has he been doing that would prevent his enrolling in UF?"
It makes the school look bad to recruits. If they just made it a rule and it wasn’t up to the school it would work much better.
Yea, I’m so lost by this. How does a straight out of HS recruit get in, but a 3 year college kid can’t ?!?
That probably wasn’t the best way to word it. I’m saying that’s why it’s not a rule, because a rule isn’t needed. The contract is enforceable as is, it doesn’t need a redundant rule to back it up. The problem is nobody is willing to actually hold anyone accountable. Signed contracts mean nothing nowadays. At least the coaches who bail on their contacts are usually forced to pay millions to break them (even though that’s usually paid by the school they’re leaving for).
He probably has credits that won't transfer. Those credits are probably necessary to be accepted in a college at UF. In my experience, universities like to deny credits, which forces students to retake classes. It's a nice revenue generator. If this is all true, it would not be the first time Tigert Hall has stepped in and prevented football and basketball from obtaining a key transfer.
He’s saying the ncaa should create a rule to enforce it, but that the schools also have the power to enforce it themselves without a rule. He’s right on both counts.