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Post by surfishin on Oct 24, 2011 2:53:30 GMT -6
Missouri is moving to the SEC and will play in their Eastern Division !!! Did you check w/ "Slappy" from the other board on this one?
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 24, 2011 6:54:23 GMT -6
Anyone else hearing that Coach Watten has another pitcher transferring to Maryland in January ... Alison Owen - A transfer from University of Georgia... Word out of NC State is that Alison Owen canceled a visit there this past weekend and that she will transfer to Mississippi State !!!
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Post by DieHardFan on Oct 24, 2011 10:12:51 GMT -6
Alison Owen - A transfer from University of Georgia... Word out of NC State is that Alison Owen canceled a visit there this past weekend and that she will transfer to Mississippi State !!! If this is indeed the case, guess she couldn't pass up the opportunity to play for Coach Vann; touted as one of the best pitching coaches in the game. And the recent addition of Beth Mullin to the MS State staff probably helped get her there as well.
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 24, 2011 10:22:13 GMT -6
Word out of NC State is that Alison Owen canceled a visit there this past weekend and that she will transfer to Mississippi State !!! If this is indeed the case, guess she couldn't pass up the opportunity to play for Coach Vann; touted as one of the best pitching coaches in the game. And the recent addition of Beth Mullin to the MS State staff probably helped get her there as well. I guess she might have to sit a year !!!
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Post by DieHardFan on Oct 24, 2011 11:03:03 GMT -6
If this is indeed the case, guess she couldn't pass up the opportunity to play for Coach Vann; touted as one of the best pitching coaches in the game. And the recent addition of Beth Mullin to the MS State staff probably helped get her there as well. I guess she might have to sit a year !!! Yeah, You could be right...been trying (unsucessfully) to find, if Lu Harris agrees to release her to play in the conference could she be eligible immediately or is it an automatic one-year sit down. Anybody know the correct answer?
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Post by LSL Dad on Oct 24, 2011 13:16:29 GMT -6
It looks like she might be eligible (unless there is an SEC rule - I will continue to look). www.ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/public/NCAA/Student-Athlete+Experience/Becoming+a+Student-Athlete/Division+I+ToolkitTransfer Rules Division I student-athletes interested in transferring to another four-year college or university and student-athletes at two-year colleges interested in attending a four-year school should be aware of the rules that govern the transfer process. •Eligibility: Transfers from two-year colleges must have their academic and amateur status certified, just as incoming freshmen do. •Permission to contact: Most transfers from four-year college or university to four-year college or university require a “permission-to-contact” letter from the current school’s athletics director to the new school’s coach or administrator. The new school cannot contact the student-athlete until the current school agrees to the contact. If the current school does not agree, the student-athlete can appeal. •Five-year clock: Division I student-athletes have five calendar years from the first enrollment at a two- or four-year school to compete four seasons of competition. •Academic year in residence: Research shows that student-athletes who remain at one college or university throughout their academic careers graduate at higher rates than those who transfer. To encourage an academic focus, the NCAA requires Division I student-athletes who transfer from a two-year school and do not meet transfer requirements or transfer from one four-year school to another four-year school to spend one academic year in residence before being eligible to play There are exceptions to the rule: ◦If the student-athlete has never transferred before from a four-year school and meets academic requirements, that student-athlete might be able to use the one-time transfer exception (except in baseball, basketball, men’s ice hockey or football).◦ If the first school dropped the sport of the affected student-athlete ◦If the student-athlete never has been recruited, received an athletics scholarship or practiced beyond a 14-consecutive day period at any school or participated in competition before transferring ◦If the student-athlete returns to the first school without participating at the second school ◦If the student-athlete did not practice or play in his or her sport for two years Individual colleges or universities and conferences also often have their own rules governing transfers. EDIT: Found the SEC rule... sec.xosdigitallabs.com/Portals/3/SEC%20Website/football/Constitution.pdf14.5.5 Four-Year College Transfers. See NCAA Bylaw 14.5.5. 14.5.5.1 Transferring within the Southeastern Conference. A transfer student from a Southeastern Conference institution shall not be eligible for intercollegiate competition at another Southeastern Conference institution until the student has fulfilled a residence requirement of one full academic year (two full semesters) at the certifying institution. Further, a transfer student-athlete admitted after the 12th class day may not utilize that semester for the purpose of establishing residency. Student-athletes meeting the terms of NCAA Bylaws 14.5.5.2.1, 14.5.5.2.2, 14.5.5.2.3, 14.5.5.2.4, 14.5.5.2.5, 14.5.5.2.6, 14.5.5.2.7, 14.5.5.2.8 and 14.5.5.2.9 may seek a waiver of the provisions of this bylaw. [Revised 6/2/00; effective 8/1/2001; Revised 6/1/08] It looks like she'll have to go the waiver route.
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Post by DieHardFan on Oct 24, 2011 14:37:31 GMT -6
It looks like she might be eligible (unless there is an SEC rule - I will continue to look). www.ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/public/NCAA/Student-Athlete+Experience/Becoming+a+Student-Athlete/Division+I+ToolkitTransfer Rules Division I student-athletes interested in transferring to another four-year college or university and student-athletes at two-year colleges interested in attending a four-year school should be aware of the rules that govern the transfer process. •Eligibility: Transfers from two-year colleges must have their academic and amateur status certified, just as incoming freshmen do. •Permission to contact: Most transfers from four-year college or university to four-year college or university require a “permission-to-contact” letter from the current school’s athletics director to the new school’s coach or administrator. The new school cannot contact the student-athlete until the current school agrees to the contact. If the current school does not agree, the student-athlete can appeal. •Five-year clock: Division I student-athletes have five calendar years from the first enrollment at a two- or four-year school to compete four seasons of competition. •Academic year in residence: Research shows that student-athletes who remain at one college or university throughout their academic careers graduate at higher rates than those who transfer. To encourage an academic focus, the NCAA requires Division I student-athletes who transfer from a two-year school and do not meet transfer requirements or transfer from one four-year school to another four-year school to spend one academic year in residence before being eligible to play There are exceptions to the rule: ◦If the student-athlete has never transferred before from a four-year school and meets academic requirements, that student-athlete might be able to use the one-time transfer exception (except in baseball, basketball, men’s ice hockey or football).◦ If the first school dropped the sport of the affected student-athlete ◦If the student-athlete never has been recruited, received an athletics scholarship or practiced beyond a 14-consecutive day period at any school or participated in competition before transferring ◦If the student-athlete returns to the first school without participating at the second school ◦If the student-athlete did not practice or play in his or her sport for two years Individual colleges or universities and conferences also often have their own rules governing transfers. EDIT: Found the SEC rule... sec.xosdigitallabs.com/Portals/3/SEC%20Website/football/Constitution.pdf14.5.5 Four-Year College Transfers. See NCAA Bylaw 14.5.5. 14.5.5.1 Transferring within the Southeastern Conference. A transfer student from a Southeastern Conference institution shall not be eligible for intercollegiate competition at another Southeastern Conference institution until the student has fulfilled a residence requirement of one full academic year (two full semesters) at the certifying institution. Further, a transfer student-athlete admitted after the 12th class day may not utilize that semester for the purpose of establishing residency. Student-athletes meeting the terms of NCAA Bylaws 14.5.5.2.1, 14.5.5.2.2, 14.5.5.2.3, 14.5.5.2.4, 14.5.5.2.5, 14.5.5.2.6, 14.5.5.2.7, 14.5.5.2.8 and 14.5.5.2.9 may seek a waiver of the provisions of this bylaw. [Revised 6/2/00; effective 8/1/2001; Revised 6/1/08] It looks like she'll have to go the waiver route. Thanks LSL, Thought there might be a waiver condition for intraconference transfers. Guess we'll find out how it worked out for her if she's on the MSU roster in February .
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 25, 2011 2:27:31 GMT -6
Missouri is moving to the SEC and will play in their Eastern Division !!! Did you check w/ "Slappy" from the other board on this one? lmao. No, I went over his head and got the scoop from "his main sports source" ... his mother-in-law !!!
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 25, 2011 8:56:59 GMT -6
It looks like she might be eligible (unless there is an SEC rule - I will continue to look). www.ncaa.org/wps/wcm/connect/public/NCAA/Student-Athlete+Experience/Becoming+a+Student-Athlete/Division+I+ToolkitTransfer Rules Division I student-athletes interested in transferring to another four-year college or university and student-athletes at two-year colleges interested in attending a four-year school should be aware of the rules that govern the transfer process. •Eligibility: Transfers from two-year colleges must have their academic and amateur status certified, just as incoming freshmen do. •Permission to contact: Most transfers from four-year college or university to four-year college or university require a “permission-to-contact” letter from the current school’s athletics director to the new school’s coach or administrator. The new school cannot contact the student-athlete until the current school agrees to the contact. If the current school does not agree, the student-athlete can appeal. •Five-year clock: Division I student-athletes have five calendar years from the first enrollment at a two- or four-year school to compete four seasons of competition. •Academic year in residence: Research shows that student-athletes who remain at one college or university throughout their academic careers graduate at higher rates than those who transfer. To encourage an academic focus, the NCAA requires Division I student-athletes who transfer from a two-year school and do not meet transfer requirements or transfer from one four-year school to another four-year school to spend one academic year in residence before being eligible to play There are exceptions to the rule: ◦If the student-athlete has never transferred before from a four-year school and meets academic requirements, that student-athlete might be able to use the one-time transfer exception (except in baseball, basketball, men’s ice hockey or football).◦ If the first school dropped the sport of the affected student-athlete ◦If the student-athlete never has been recruited, received an athletics scholarship or practiced beyond a 14-consecutive day period at any school or participated in competition before transferring ◦If the student-athlete returns to the first school without participating at the second school ◦If the student-athlete did not practice or play in his or her sport for two years Individual colleges or universities and conferences also often have their own rules governing transfers. EDIT: Found the SEC rule... sec.xosdigitallabs.com/Portals/3/SEC%20Website/football/Constitution.pdf14.5.5 Four-Year College Transfers. See NCAA Bylaw 14.5.5. 14.5.5.1 Transferring within the Southeastern Conference. A transfer student from a Southeastern Conference institution shall not be eligible for intercollegiate competition at another Southeastern Conference institution until the student has fulfilled a residence requirement of one full academic year (two full semesters) at the certifying institution. Further, a transfer student-athlete admitted after the 12th class day may not utilize that semester for the purpose of establishing residency. Student-athletes meeting the terms of NCAA Bylaws 14.5.5.2.1, 14.5.5.2.2, 14.5.5.2.3, 14.5.5.2.4, 14.5.5.2.5, 14.5.5.2.6, 14.5.5.2.7, 14.5.5.2.8 and 14.5.5.2.9 may seek a waiver of the provisions of this bylaw. [Revised 6/2/00; effective 8/1/2001; Revised 6/1/08] It looks like she'll have to go the waiver route. Thanks LSL, Thought there might be a waiver condition for intraconference transfers. Guess we'll find out how it worked out for her if she's on the MSU roster in February . I'm hearing that if Alison Owen transfers in January, she will have to sit spring 2012 and fall 2012 and then she will able to play spring 2013. If this is the case, I don't see why you wouldn't go to a team outside the SEC. Too many things can happen in (over) a year !!!
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Post by surfishin on Oct 25, 2011 14:21:21 GMT -6
LSL Dad... -15 Karma?? LMAO!
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Post by LSL Dad on Oct 25, 2011 16:59:09 GMT -6
LSL Dad... -15 Karma?? LMAO! It is the Rb folks or the people from Howard County. They both hate LSL.
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 26, 2011 2:33:54 GMT -6
LSL Dad... -15 Karma?? LMAO! And falling ... too funny, wait until HS season gets here !!!
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Post by surfishin on Oct 26, 2011 2:40:58 GMT -6
LSL Dad... -15 Karma?? LMAO! It is the Rb folks or the people from Howard County. They both hate LSL. RB.., I mean LSL Dad, you're OK, but we're taking that scorebook away.......
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Post by LSL Dad on Oct 26, 2011 10:09:24 GMT -6
It is the Rb folks or the people from Howard County. They both hate LSL. RB.., I mean LSL Dad, you're OK, but we're taking that scorebook away....... Then how will my daughter have a good batting average?
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Post by The Real Truf on Oct 26, 2011 10:23:13 GMT -6
RB.., I mean LSL Dad, you're OK, but we're taking that scorebook away....... Then how will my daughter have a good batting average? Not by you showing her how to hit !!! Go Dores' ...
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