buckeyesin07
Veni. Vidi. Vici.
do you really not see the massive difference here? beverly never played in a game for ohio state. braxton never even practiced with his teammates. at most, he had a few hours of training under the staff. that's it. how in the world is that anything at all like deciding to transfer after playing a whole season? it's not even remotely similar.
coaches can change jobs on a whim. the only possible penalty is purely monetary. they're not held out of competing. their destinations for employment aren't restricted. they have free rein. but the players? noooooooooo. not only are they held out for a whole year, but they can -- and usually do -- have their target destinations limited, often out of pure spite.
in my opinion, if transfers are held out of competition for a year, then so should coaches if they change jobs. if transfers are denied a scholarship for one season if they attend a program that the coach blacklists, then the coaches should be denied pay for one year if they go to a school the players blacklist.
but anyway, all beverly did was attend summer school for a few weeks. that's it. he didn't play and he didn't have formal practice. the coach he committed to was fired. that was beyond beverly's control. arguing for the letter of the law while completely denying the spirit of the law is myopic.
what i'd like to see keatts do is play beverly anyway. play him in game one. make a spectacle of the ncaa's absurdity.
the rules on what he did are, actually, readily available. if you don't want this to happen, don't transfer, or do your due diligence. it's actually a good life lesson, my man.
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