http://es.pn/c7vcUb
This story had been bugging me ever since I heard about it, but now it looks like justice will be served...
Very glad to see that the NCAA denied 2010 eligibility to Jeremiah Masoli, the former Oregon QB who was kicked off the team for stealing laptops from a fraternity house.
He had transferred to Ole Miss, and was applying to get a waiver of the transfer requirement to sit out a year on what, to me, looked like a bizarre technicality. Houston Nutt and Ole Miss were trying to exploit a loophole in the NCAA transfer regulations to get Masoli eligible to start at QB for them in 2010.
Because Masoli had graduated and still had a year of eligibility, the NCAA rules say you can transfer for "graduate school" as long as the subject you want to get an advanced degree in isn't offered by the school you currently attend.
For starters, who believes that a guy who steals laptops in his spare time is a serious graduate student in anything? Second, all he'd have to do is pick any major area of study that he knew Oregon didn't offer, in order to qualify under the rule. (Word is he was going to pursue a Masters in "Parks and Recreation")
So, anyone else has to sit out a year, but this thief was going receive special consideration just because he had already graduated.
Glad the NCAA did the right thing, and said no, even though the "letter" of the rule was being followed.
"The NCAA felt that the rule allowing players to apply for immediate eligibility while entering a grad school was not created for athletes to avoid discipline."
Duh.
