
RYou
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Everything posted by RYou
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Possibly. RU is mighty thin 165-174. 174 is a bit of a leap from 157 for Kinniard. The only other option aside from bumping Clark up from 165 is to pull the red shirt off of another true frosh, Luke Gayer.
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Soldano - true frosh, 3x NJ State Champ Poznanski - Red Shirt-likely back at 197 in 2023, but if not, Soldano takes the RS
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Poz is red shirting. He'll likely beat 197 when he's back in 23/24. Soldano will remain at 184.
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Patrick Glory - listed as a senior, not grad, 22/23 is his 5th year - Patrick Glory - Wrestling - Princeton University Athletics (goprincetontigers.com) Quincy Monday - listed as a senior, not grad, 22/23 is his 5th year - Quincy Monday - Wrestling - Princeton University Athletics (goprincetontigers.com) Now I get it, neither were on the Princeton roster during the 20/21 season the Ivy cancelled all sports. 2020-21 Wrestling Roster - Princeton University Athletics (goprincetontigers.com) Both took a gap year and did not enroll. See below, too bad they couldn't get an Olympic waiver which would have preserved that year of eligibility ‘Back out on the mat’: Wrestler Pat Glory ’23 competes through gap year - The Princetonian (dailyprincetonian.com)
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Any Ivy athlete with *NCAA* eligibility left at graduation is and always has been free to transfer outside the Ivy League and compete as a graduate student eslewhere (see Patrick Brucki graduating from Princeton and competing for Michigan). Ah, how a minor omission "not", makes a bit of a difference. 11 hours ago BigRedFan said: "Any Ivy athlete with *NCAA* eligibility left at graduation is and always has been free to transfer outside the Ivy League and compete as a graduate student eslewhere (see Patrick Brucki graduating from Princeton and competing for Michigan)." Essentially this is the point I've making. In relation to the Dartmouth article posted, how is it Glory and Monday have a 5th year of Ivy eligibility, but didn't graduate in 2021 ? (Ivys cap participation at 4 years)
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Graduate student eligibility extension denied for Classes of 2022, 2023 and 2024 | The Dartmouth Check out this article. The Ivy is allowing graduates in 2022, 2023 and 2024, an extra year of eligibility to compete as a graduate student. If they are eligible at their Ivy, they'll be eligible at any NCAA school, with or without a scholarship. Obviously, they need to qualify for and be offered a seat as a graduate student, or they can just transfer.
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As I understand it, there is a difference between "competed" versus "on the roster". You need only be on the roster to qualify and Glory and Monday were on the Princeton roster that season.
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I'm optimistic that this site will not be TheMat II.
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Yianni Diakomihalis 2017–2018 Yianni Diakomihalis has a bit of a different story. He has used three years of eligibility Taking an Olympic waiver and applying a red shirt to the year the IVY cancelled the season. Even though he was not on the Cornell roster during his Olympic waiver year, he qualifies for an extra year of eligibility from the COVID bonus since he was on the 2020/21 roster that was awarded the year. 2017/18 - 37-1 NCAA Champion 2018/19 - 22-0 NCAA Champion 2019/20 Diakomihalis did not compete accepting an Olympic waiver. 2020-21 - Ivy League cancelled season (Red shirt equivalent) 2021/22 - 28-0 NCAA champion 2022/23 - TBD Hmmm, could Yianni team up with Glory and Monday and deliver 3 NCAA finalists to some fortunate school?
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It's actually the 5th year for both of them. Even though they are at an Ivy, they gained the COVID 6th bonus year Since they did not wrestle in 2020/21, it's considered a red shirt year Glory 2018/19 - 30-7 AA 2019-20 - 24-0. NWCA AA - tournament cancelled by NCAA 2020/21 - seasonal cancelled by Ivy League (red shirt equivalent) 2021-22 - 20-2, AA 2nd 2022/23 - TBD Monday 2018/19 - 24-13 NCAA qualifier 2019-20 - 23-4- NWCA AA - tournament cancelled by NCAA 2020/21 - seasonal cancelled by Ivy League (red shirt equivalent) 2021-22 - 24-4 - AA 2nd 2022/23 - TBD
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Clarion at Rutgers, 6:00 PM* * At Rec Hall, not Jersey Mikes Arena a/k/a The RAC
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It looks like Princeton / Iviy League rules are allowing QM and PG and presumably others, a 5TH year of eligibility. Ordinarily the Ivy League only allows 4 years of eligibility, 4 in 4 instead of NCAA 4 in 5. So, this is their final Ivy season, but both have a COVID year under the NCAA allowance. Do either / both continue wrestling and enroll elsewhere and if so, where? Will they seek out a top tier graduate program, or go a national championship? For Glory, it would mean a shot at being a 5x AA and there are many with that in their bio. Being Princeton teammates, will they want a both or neither offer?
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Robbie Howard out with injury, Gary Steen is Penn State's 125
RYou replied to VakAttack's topic in College Wrestling
Robles was a 125 but his shoulders were those of a 149er. -
It's like a tell in poker. The pitcher develops a habit before certain pitches letting the batter know what's coming. Maybe he throws over the top on curves and sliders, but goes 3/4 sidearm on fastballs. Or. maybe he pats his leg before a fastball. It doesn't have to the pitcher. SS and 2nd usually know what's being thrown. We were up against a ss that would slide move toward second on fastballs, but would move right and into the hole on curves. We just watched which way the shortstop went and we knew what pitch was coming.
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Teemer was scheduled to compete at the National Wrestling Coaches Association All-Star Classic. Have they identified a replacement ?
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I agree with the academic preparation aspect. While many kids are smart enough to graduate in 4 years, many are not. All sports, except maybe swimming golf and tennis recruit kids that aren't rocket scientists and barely qualify to attend the easiest of admission schools. The first year red shirt enables the school to provide academic tutoring to get those kids accommodated to campus academics and have a chance of actually graduating. I suspect many schools know a kid specific kid is only looking to get to a point talent wide to be drafted and there is no intent to finish with a sheepskin, and the school steers academics to meet the minimum eligibility standards.I'm sure this scenario occurs far less in collegiate wrestling as opposed to football, basketball and hockey.
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RYou RYouAskinMe abbreviation which was my old moniker on The Mat before it booted me for mentioning The Open Mat startup.
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Track Wrestling was put in the grim reaper's sights the day Flo bought it. In refuse to buy into Flo and the same will stand for Track
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.....one benefit that has been omitted.....it enables a good student to graduate in 3 (with AP entry credit) or 4 years and start a graduate degree while remaining on scholarship. There was a kid at Penn State a few years back that was able to graduate in 3, do his graduate degree year 4 and started medical school in his 5th year. He even got a 6th medical waiver year. A rarity for sure, but it worked to his benefit. His was footballer, so he was on full scholarship for all 6 years. Flip side, the Ivies limit eligibility to 4 years, no redshirts, no medical waiver years, though some of the schools promote a training year off before enrolling for your first year. The Ivies do allow an intern year out of school. UPenn used to push that one. Academics and sport for 2-3 years, then they would line you up for a year away interning, often at a Wall St brokerage where you would get paid a tidy sum before reenrolling to finish your eligibility. The NCAA accepts it since they are still competing in 4 of the allowable 5 years.
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Odds that Spencer Lee does not win NCAAs this year?
RYou replied to Dark Energy's topic in College Wrestling
Stieber did it 5 (RS +4) Lee will have matched it in 6 (4 + COVID + Medical Year) How do fit that into your equation? -
No international ties. He'll be around through 2028 at least, then off to coaching, or selling wrestling mats.
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It probably would be a different outcome if it wasn't a B1G to B1G transfer.
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Only an AD can approve a release. Coaches give input, which the AD usually follows.
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Unlike whimsical Executive Orders touting restrictive regulatory action issued by Obama and Biden, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 is legislative authority. Anti-discrimination requirements in education are here to stay, legislatively (unless of course, Congress fails to reauthorize it at some point in the future). What you will see cease are the often daffy interpretations published as Dear Colleague letters issues by DOE which holds to be enforceable statutory actions. As for gender equality in sports, the current standards for determining the equality of sports opportunities at Cs and Us will stand until challenged by a school or individual. Gender identity in sports is the next big issue that will be brought before SCOTUS at some point. Despite all of the wishers and wannabes, and administrative edicts, Section 195 of the Equality Act refers to sex, not gender identity. It is lawful to exclude males from female sports categories. It is lawful to require a copy of a birth certificate to document and designate male or female sex.