First ...
Then ...Shabaj declared ineligible at Michigan State
July 10, 2005, 2:51 PM ET
Associated Press
EAST LANSING, Mich.-- Michigan State receiver Agim Shabaj will enter the NFL's supplemental draft after being declared ineligible for the 2005 season.
Shabaj, who would be a senior this season, was the Spartans' third-leading receiver in 2004 with 29 catches for 308 yards and one touchdown. He was the team's leading receiver in 2003 with 57 catches for 692 yards and five touchdowns.
Under Big Ten rules, academically ineligible athletes are not allowed to remain on scholarship.
Followed by (a column from Northwestern) ...Michigan State receiver Shabaj to enter supplemental draft
Monday, 11 July 2005
Written by Next Level Sports
Michigan State receiver Agim Shabaj (ah-GEEM' shuh-BY') will enter the N-F-L supplemental draft. He had been expected to miss the 2005 season at MSU for being declared academically ineligible. The 5-foot-10, 190-pound wide receiver and kick returner plans to hold a workout for N-F-L teams Tuesday in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills.
Shabaj would have been a senior and was the Spartans' third-leading receiver in 2004 with 29 catches for 308 yards and one touchdown. He was the team's leading receiver in 2003.
Shabaj said he was declared ineligible after not writing his student I-D number on a chemistry final, causing a professor to discard the score. He said he was one credit shy of eligibility.
His status was confirmed by an MSU official last month.
If these reports are true, then I really feel bad for Shabaj. Someone at MSU must fear the wrath of the NCAA if cutting a kid loose is easier than helping the kid earn a credit by fixing an honest mistake on a test he took that he would have otherwise passed.Random Thoughts: The Value of a Missing Student ID
Date: Jul 11, 2005
By Roy Lamberton Publisher, Purple Reign
The Big 10 lost one of its more prolific receivers last week, as Michigan State's Agim Shabaj was declared academically ineligible. Shabaj was one credit short because his student ID number was missing on a final exam. Coach Roy wonders if Shabaj's mistake should disqualify him from finishing his education ...
OK, I'm not one to favor bending rules for athletes ...
but forgetting your student ID number on a final exam should not force you to forfeit your athletic scholarship, probably the only reason why you are attending a college.
Instead of improving on his MSU receiving records, and probably his mind, Shabaj is headed for the uncertain world of the NFL, which chews up and spits out wide receivers like so much confetti.
And he's going to the NFL without a college degree, which, should he not make a team this year, could leave him spinning slowly in the wind.
NU had a player who left college early, Darnell Autry. He's still one of NU's top rushers, even without his senior year, but he's back on campus finishing his degree, 10 years after his class graduated.
He found that its a cold hard world out there without that piece of paper that says you know what you know. Autry is back at NU, learning more about his craft, learning theater with students who barely remember NU's #2 career rusher.
I also finished up at NU in my mid 20's after being out in the world - I know the value of that piece of paper. I think Darnell knows it too.
So I guess I'm just amazed that Michigan State would bounce a kid for failing to put a number on a paper that probably had his name on the top, but then MSU is a big university and it would be too much for a prof to look at his class list and make a phone call.
Yeah, doing that is probably a violation of some obscure rule somewhere, but its seems awfully petty when a kids' future is potentially on the line.
But then all bureaucracy can be petty, can't it.