Would agree with that.
Transfer Portal 2024
- MDlaxfan76
- Posts: 27453
- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
If I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
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- Posts: 23930
- Joined: Sat Feb 23, 2019 10:53 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Makes sense and suspected that’s what you meant. Unless he’s Eric Swann.wahoomurf wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:25 pmMea Culpa.Poorly worded.A year readjusting to FB.Then perhaps the NFL.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 10:37 amThe next level meaning college or just throwing caution to the wind and trying to get camp invites? And does this square with the assertion or information fed here that he’s going to play football at Rutgers?wahoomurf wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 10:16 amTrevor was the NYS POY in Football and received interest from many big time schools to play Football. Not just the Ivies. His folks let the recruiters know EMPHATICALLY that football was NOT IN Trev's college plans.
I watched him play in H.S. I'd be interested to watch him play at the next level.
Harvard University, out
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
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- Posts: 23930
- Joined: Sat Feb 23, 2019 10:53 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Obviously with so many in the portal who didn’t go anywhere it’s not almost a certainty they know where they’re landing when they enter it. Last year alone is evidence of this.
Harvard University, out
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
University of Utah, in
I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.
(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
The NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
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- Posts: 261
- Joined: Fri Sep 07, 2018 3:00 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Newly Added to the Portal
Justin Tiernan- Lehigh- Attack - Grad Transfer
John Sidorski- Lehigh - Midfield - Grad Transfer
Justin Tiernan- Lehigh- Attack - Grad Transfer
John Sidorski- Lehigh - Midfield - Grad Transfer
- MDlaxfan76
- Posts: 27453
- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Really? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
That was 9 years ago. A lot has changed.
Namely players are getting reached out to directly by aggressive alumni and powerbrokers of other schools. Some kids want to only go to a certain school and if that can't happen they don't want to be listed in the portal. It puts them in a precarious position if the school they want to go to doesn't accept them for whatever reason.
There are a myriad of reasons as to why a player might not want to portal. And there are ways for them not to have to portal until the last minute.
Until the NCAA comes down with a hammer on a school/player doing this, it's not going to change, and is likely to get a lot worse.
Why risk it? Why not, no one seems to be paying a price for it.
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Albany: Joey Pezzimenti (A)-> Le Moyne
Binghamton: Dylan Braddock (M), Matthew DeSouza (FO), Thomas Greenblatt (M), Max Napoli (M), Quinn O'Hara (M)
Boston U: Christian Quadrino (M)#
Brown: Matthew Gunty (FO), Griffin King (M), Devon McLane (A)
Bucknell: Daniel Striano (M), Hank Bethel (D) -> NJIT
Canisius: Colin Kelly (A), Kevin Carney (A)
Colgate: Connor Brook (M), Thomas Colucci (FO), Donny Gayhardt (D), Michael Lia (D)
Cornell: Chayse Ierlan (G)
Dartmouth: Peter Rizzotti (D) -> Rutgers
Delaware: Corbin Minard (FO)
Harvard: Chase Yager (M)
Holy Cross: Jayce Lambert (M), Cameron Magalotti (M), Thomas McIntire (A)
Jacksonville: Ezekiel Lomax (M), Luke Robinson (M), Steven Woolery (M)
Lafayette: Liam DiFonzo (M), JP Robinson (D), James Turco (FO), Ryan Duncan (A)
Lehigh: Caleb Creasor (G), Christian Mule (A), John Sidorski (M), Justin Tiernan (A)
Loyola: Joey Greco (G)
Marquette: Sean Richard (G), Michael Allieri (G)
Maryland: Brian Burlace (LSM), Jackson Marshall (G), Gavin Tygh (FO)
Mercer: Thomas Berry (A)->Le Moyne, Wesley Chairs (D) -> Georgetown
Michigan: Jake Bonomi (M)
Navy: Max Silva (LSM)
North Carolina: Matt Wright (LSM)
Notre Dame: Maximus Schalit (D)
Ohio State: Daniel Garone (M), Oran Gelinas (G)#, Richie LaCalandra (A)
Princeton: Sam English (M), Jake Stevens (M), Alex Slusher (A), Beau Pederson (SSDM), Alex Vardaro (M), Christian Ronda (A), Griffen Rakower (G), Weston Carpenter (M), Jacob Stoebner (D)
Providence: Justin Bordner (FO)
Rutgers: Erik Henig (M), Remington Reynolds (LSM/M)#, Matt Dollive (M)#, Luke Romanek (FO)#
Sacred Heart: Nick Labanca (G)
St. Joe's: Ryan Kemp (A)
Syracuse: Liam Ferris (M)#
UMass: Kevin Lynch (D)
Vermont: Nicholas Alviti (LSM), Tommy Burke (FO) -> Ohio State, Jackson Canfield (D), Stone Jacobs (A), Daniel Manning (D), Timothy Manning (D), Per-Anders Olter (A), Colin Sharkey (M)
Virginia: Daniel Parker (M), Mac Eldridge (FO)#
VMI: Tim Lindenbaum (D), Hartley Jordan (M) -> UNC
Wagner: Eli Fisher (M) -> Ohio State, Danny Brady (G), Brendan Higgins (LSM)
Yale: Lucas Osborne (M)#
D2/D3/Other
Bowdoin: Ethan Barnard (FO), Zack Goorno (M)
Christopher Newport: Cambell Pozin (M)
Conn. College: Jack Venturelli (D)
Gettysburg: Zach Puckhaber (D), George Raymond (A)
Hampden-Sydney: Nick Morgan (D) -> UNC
Lenoir-Rhyne: Torin Eccleston (M), Bryce Reece (M)
Pace: Anthony Caputo (M) -> Jacksonville
Salisbury: Zach Timmons (D)
Scranton: Chris Crapanzano (M) -> Albany
Southern Virginia: Carter Bean (M)
St. Lawrence: Joe Scarfi (D)
Tufts: Kyle Adelmann (D), Jack Boyden (A)
Washington and Lee: Harris Hubbard (D) -> Rutgers
Wesleyan: Nolan Collins (D), Matthew Gill (A)
Key
* in the portal for 2025 season
# undergraduate Transfer
BOLD = most recent update
Binghamton: Dylan Braddock (M), Matthew DeSouza (FO), Thomas Greenblatt (M), Max Napoli (M), Quinn O'Hara (M)
Boston U: Christian Quadrino (M)#
Brown: Matthew Gunty (FO), Griffin King (M), Devon McLane (A)
Bucknell: Daniel Striano (M), Hank Bethel (D) -> NJIT
Canisius: Colin Kelly (A), Kevin Carney (A)
Colgate: Connor Brook (M), Thomas Colucci (FO), Donny Gayhardt (D), Michael Lia (D)
Cornell: Chayse Ierlan (G)
Dartmouth: Peter Rizzotti (D) -> Rutgers
Delaware: Corbin Minard (FO)
Harvard: Chase Yager (M)
Holy Cross: Jayce Lambert (M), Cameron Magalotti (M), Thomas McIntire (A)
Jacksonville: Ezekiel Lomax (M), Luke Robinson (M), Steven Woolery (M)
Lafayette: Liam DiFonzo (M), JP Robinson (D), James Turco (FO), Ryan Duncan (A)
Lehigh: Caleb Creasor (G), Christian Mule (A), John Sidorski (M), Justin Tiernan (A)
Loyola: Joey Greco (G)
Marquette: Sean Richard (G), Michael Allieri (G)
Maryland: Brian Burlace (LSM), Jackson Marshall (G), Gavin Tygh (FO)
Mercer: Thomas Berry (A)->Le Moyne, Wesley Chairs (D) -> Georgetown
Michigan: Jake Bonomi (M)
Navy: Max Silva (LSM)
North Carolina: Matt Wright (LSM)
Notre Dame: Maximus Schalit (D)
Ohio State: Daniel Garone (M), Oran Gelinas (G)#, Richie LaCalandra (A)
Princeton: Sam English (M), Jake Stevens (M), Alex Slusher (A), Beau Pederson (SSDM), Alex Vardaro (M), Christian Ronda (A), Griffen Rakower (G), Weston Carpenter (M), Jacob Stoebner (D)
Providence: Justin Bordner (FO)
Rutgers: Erik Henig (M), Remington Reynolds (LSM/M)#, Matt Dollive (M)#, Luke Romanek (FO)#
Sacred Heart: Nick Labanca (G)
St. Joe's: Ryan Kemp (A)
Syracuse: Liam Ferris (M)#
UMass: Kevin Lynch (D)
Vermont: Nicholas Alviti (LSM), Tommy Burke (FO) -> Ohio State, Jackson Canfield (D), Stone Jacobs (A), Daniel Manning (D), Timothy Manning (D), Per-Anders Olter (A), Colin Sharkey (M)
Virginia: Daniel Parker (M), Mac Eldridge (FO)#
VMI: Tim Lindenbaum (D), Hartley Jordan (M) -> UNC
Wagner: Eli Fisher (M) -> Ohio State, Danny Brady (G), Brendan Higgins (LSM)
Yale: Lucas Osborne (M)#
D2/D3/Other
Bowdoin: Ethan Barnard (FO), Zack Goorno (M)
Christopher Newport: Cambell Pozin (M)
Conn. College: Jack Venturelli (D)
Gettysburg: Zach Puckhaber (D), George Raymond (A)
Hampden-Sydney: Nick Morgan (D) -> UNC
Lenoir-Rhyne: Torin Eccleston (M), Bryce Reece (M)
Pace: Anthony Caputo (M) -> Jacksonville
Salisbury: Zach Timmons (D)
Scranton: Chris Crapanzano (M) -> Albany
Southern Virginia: Carter Bean (M)
St. Lawrence: Joe Scarfi (D)
Tufts: Kyle Adelmann (D), Jack Boyden (A)
Washington and Lee: Harris Hubbard (D) -> Rutgers
Wesleyan: Nolan Collins (D), Matthew Gill (A)
Key
* in the portal for 2025 season
# undergraduate Transfer
BOLD = most recent update
-
- Posts: 312
- Joined: Tue Jul 31, 2018 10:34 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
I think that a lot has to do with the school more so than the NCAA particularly when a "potential" rule violation is being investigated, school A might have an over abundance of caution and make the kid sit while another school may let the kid practice while investigation is going on.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pm
Really? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
As to the other point, anybody that thinks that contact is not being made prior to a kid entering the portal also believes that no college lacrosse player gambles college lacrosse including his own teams games. players talk to players and recruit them, I would imagine with someone on the coaching staffs knowledge, Ie: team A needs a SSDM and a kid on team A played travel with a ssdm on team B, kid on team A asks his DC if they might be interested in his friend, the DC says hell yes and now the player on A texts the player on team B and says "yo, what's up? ever think about coming here?" ..... not sure any violations have occurred but there is a pretty good chance that the deal is done before the kid puts his name in the portal.
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Surprised that Barnard (FOGO) hasn't been picked up from Bowdoin...Kid is LEGIT
- MDlaxfan76
- Posts: 27453
- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
well, 2023-2016 = 7 years, but hey, precision wasn't your point.1766 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:11 pmMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
That was 9 years ago. A lot has changed.
Namely players are getting reached out to directly by aggressive alumni and powerbrokers of other schools. Some kids want to only go to a certain school and if that can't happen they don't want to be listed in the portal. It puts them in a precarious position if the school they want to go to doesn't accept them for whatever reason.
There are a myriad of reasons as to why a player might not want to portal. And there are ways for them not to have to portal until the last minute.
Until the NCAA comes down with a hammer on a school/player doing this, it's not going to change, and is likely to get a lot worse.
Why risk it? Why not, no one seems to be paying a price for it.
My point is less about the specific sort of infraction, but rather how schools treat potential compliance violations. And I very much doubt that has changed in 7 or 9 years. I also don't think his school's compliance officers (Ivy) were way more careful than what would have happened at say a Big 10 or ACC school. At least in non-revenue sports. Maybe someone will argue that Ivies care more about following rules than do other leagues, but that's not going to be my assumption.
sure, some big money programs have always skirted the various rules, sometimes quite consciously and conspiratorially...and when found out, big scandals.
But doing so with non-revenue sports is really foolhardy.
The example you give of having only one potential destination school desired, and if that doesn't happen they'll stick with their current school, would be an obvious and egregious abuse of the process and both the athlete and any destination school that participated in backdoor discussions would deserve whatever punishment meted out.
There's nothing at all wrong with wanting to leave your school. There's also nothing wrong with wanting to let people know you're at least open to considering moving...sure, your current team mates and coaches may look at you and wonder whether you're 'all in' with them, but the truth is, you're not. Until you decide to be...and if so, you can withdraw from the portal.
I take your word for it that there are athletes and schools currently playing this game, and if no one gets 'hammered' for it, "it'll get worse".
But If there's an athlete or parent out there reading this thread, don't be the one the hammer comes down on...it ain't worth it.
It's easy to avoid that happening.
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
I think exactly that is happening yet heads are still intactMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
- MDlaxfan76
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- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
I'd not be surprised by that scenario either, and sure, there's a technical violation with that phone tag...but "deal is done" would imply that the athlete knows he'll be accepted academically, knows he can obtain the release academically, knows what scholarship is or isn't offered, etc...which would involve a lot more than saying 'yeah, we'd love to have that player' casually to a player on one's own team.jersey shore lax wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:27 pmI think that a lot has to do with the school more so than the NCAA particularly when a "potential" rule violation is being investigated, school A might have an over abundance of caution and make the kid sit while another school may let the kid practice while investigation is going on.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pm
Really? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
As to the other point, anybody that thinks that contact is not being made prior to a kid entering the portal also believes that no college lacrosse player gambles college lacrosse including his own teams games. players talk to players and recruit them, I would imagine with someone on the coaching staffs knowledge, Ie: team A needs a SSDM and a kid on team A played travel with a ssdm on team B, kid on team A asks his DC if they might be interested in his friend, the DC says hell yes and now the player on A texts the player on team B and says "yo, what's up? ever think about coming here?" ..... not sure any violations have occurred but there is a pretty good chance that the deal is done before the kid puts his name in the portal.
Yes, schools may well have varying degrees of being uptight about potential violations...some may want to avoid absolutely, not give any excuse for a scandal, whereas others may have seen so many violations they're inured to the petty ones...possible.
But my point is that schools don't want to put their reputations at risk, programs don't want to be sanctioned, coaches don't want to lose their jobs...and players shouldn't be willing to risk their own eligibility.
- MDlaxfan76
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- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
If so, it's a problem waiting to blow up in someone's face.Laxbuck wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:45 pmI think exactly that is happening yet heads are still intactMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
I just don't see the risk/reward.
Mebbe someone's a little stupid, or ignorant of the rules, and stumbles into this, but if you're actually serious about moving schools, go in the portal...the prospective coaches can then engage with you, knowing as well that they're not the only ones potentially making an offer...
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:43 pmwell, 2023-2016 = 7 years, but hey, precision wasn't your point.1766 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:11 pmMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
That was 9 years ago. A lot has changed.
Namely players are getting reached out to directly by aggressive alumni and powerbrokers of other schools. Some kids want to only go to a certain school and if that can't happen they don't want to be listed in the portal. It puts them in a precarious position if the school they want to go to doesn't accept them for whatever reason.
There are a myriad of reasons as to why a player might not want to portal. And there are ways for them not to have to portal until the last minute.
Until the NCAA comes down with a hammer on a school/player doing this, it's not going to change, and is likely to get a lot worse.
Why risk it? Why not, no one seems to be paying a price for it.
My point is less about the specific sort of infraction, but rather how schools treat potential compliance violations. And I very much doubt that has changed in 7 or 9 years. I also don't think his school's compliance officers (Ivy) were way more careful than what would have happened at say a Big 10 or ACC school. At least in non-revenue sports. Maybe someone will argue that Ivies care more about following rules than do other leagues, but that's not going to be my assumption.
sure, some big money programs have always skirted the various rules, sometimes quite consciously and conspiratorially...and when found out, big scandals.
But doing so with non-revenue sports is really foolhardy.
The example you give of having only one potential destination school desired, and if that doesn't happen they'll stick with their current school, would be an obvious and egregious abuse of the process and both the athlete and any destination school that participated in backdoor discussions would deserve whatever punishment meted out.
There's nothing at all wrong with wanting to leave your school. There's also nothing wrong with wanting to let people know you're at least open to considering moving...sure, your current team mates and coaches may look at you and wonder whether you're 'all in' with them, but the truth is, you're not. Until you decide to be...and if so, you can withdraw from the portal.
I take your word for it that there are athletes and schools currently playing this game, and if no one gets 'hammered' for it, "it'll get worse".
But If there's an athlete or parent out there reading this thread, don't be the one the hammer comes down on...it ain't worth it.
It's easy to avoid that happening.
The schools aren't necessarily involved until such time as they have to be. It's all done through back channeling.
Kid wants to go to a certainly school. Coach or someone connected to that school gets reached out to through various intermediaries- players, old high school coach, friend, whatever.
Coach does some due diligence such as grades to see if they can get into their school, which probably isn't likely to be an issue, perhaps a conversation gets set up, then voila. Go in the portal and we can officially make this happen.
There are kids not in the portal right now that have different schools they are going to.
The NCAA is a mess in it's current state. You'd have to be doing something really egregious to get in any real trouble at this point, and even then it's probably not very likely. You can literally pay players now across sports. The veneer of amateur sports is over, and with it, just about everything else that guided it prior.
This is a much broader discussion. What role does the NCAA play moving forward? I have no idea.
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Re: Transfer Portal 2024
The key thing here is to ensure the kids on team A and team B are using cheap, disposable burner phones.jersey shore lax wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:27 pmI think that a lot has to do with the school more so than the NCAA particularly when a "potential" rule violation is being investigated, school A might have an over abundance of caution and make the kid sit while another school may let the kid practice while investigation is going on.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pm
Really? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
As to the other point, anybody that thinks that contact is not being made prior to a kid entering the portal also believes that no college lacrosse player gambles college lacrosse including his own teams games. players talk to players and recruit them, I would imagine with someone on the coaching staffs knowledge, Ie: team A needs a SSDM and a kid on team A played travel with a ssdm on team B, kid on team A asks his DC if they might be interested in his friend, the DC says hell yes and now the player on A texts the player on team B and says "yo, what's up? ever think about coming here?" ..... not sure any violations have occurred but there is a pretty good chance that the deal is done before the kid puts his name in the portal.
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/buyi ... rner-phone
DocBarrister
@DocBarrister
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
The Athletic did a story last week about tampering in college football. It is rampant. Coaches will call other coaches to tell them to stop, but no one will go to the NCAA about it. The big fear, it seems, is that a coach won't know if his own house in order and gets a boomerang NCAA violation. There's probably also some "snitches/ditches" worry. Blow the whistle on someone and get black balled.
- MDlaxfan76
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- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2024
I'm pretty down on the NCAA as well, but what you just described is coaches knowingly and willfully violating the rules. That's a swift way to get booted at many colleges. Perhaps not all.1766 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 2:00 pmMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:43 pmwell, 2023-2016 = 7 years, but hey, precision wasn't your point.1766 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 1:11 pmMDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 12:57 pmReally? No teeth? My son got caught up in a misunderstanding back in 2016 that prevented him from practicing for over a month (fortunately partly during Xmas break) because of purported non-compliance with an NCAA regulation against his identifying himself as a lax player at his school in making an introduction to other coaches at the school... with no compensation involved...he was found totally blameless and in compliance, but even a question had real 'teeth' in repercussions. NIL now obviates that particular issue, but schools want very much to remain in compliance with the NCAA. They certainly don't want to violate for a non-revenue sport!1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 6:39 pmThe NCAA has no teeth. Players understand this and have little fear. It's happening all over the place at a number of schools.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 4:27 pmIf I'm not mistaken, there can be no contact with the new school's athletic staff until they are in the portal. Direct or indirect. At least for undergraduates.1766 wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 3:38 pmKids can and often do work through intermediaries. Once they enter the portal, it's almost a certainty as to where they will land. Early Ivy announcers wouldn't fall under that category along with some others. It behooves a player to keep it as close to the vest as possible.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 2:55 pmAnother interesting take. I didn’t realize players could keep it a secret but I guess this list on here is generated by word of mouth and not from an official site.BrownDad wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 12:25 pmMy guess would be that a lot of kids were embarrassed seeing their name on that list without a New School. It would make sense that they learned from the onslaught of names on the list last year and are going through the process in a more private way.Exlaxbro wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:16 amThat makes sense. I went back through the forum from last year and there were a ton more on that list. Many never found a landing spot so I am happy this group is thinking through it a bit more.Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 8:07 amWould be expected but also I think more are figuring out still what they want based on where they may have been accepted. Doesn’t strictly follow traditional enrollment timelines for many/all colleges on these circumstances. More kids who lost part of their FR year rather than mid college career so different choice.
If so, that would suggest that those, doing as you describe (if undergrads) are putting their eligibility at risk...and potential sanctions of the school participating in such contact.
What happens if a student-athlete had impermissible communications, directly or indirectly, with coaching staff or boosters at the Division I school to which they transfer?
A7: Existing recruiting rules prohibit communication and contact with a student-athlete enrolled at another NCAA school prior to the student-athlete appearing in the NCAA Transfer Portal. These rules also prohibit the indirect use of third parties contacting individuals on the student-athlete’s behalf (e.g., family member, scholastic or no scholastic coach, advisor). Certain violations of these rules can constitute a significant breach of conduct as it relates to the NCAA infractions process. A student-athlete’s eligibility can be jeopardized at the school that engaged in impermissible communication.
http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/eligibility_cen ... ansfer.pdf
If it's as rampant as you suggest, I'd warn anyone doing so to hope like heck they're not the one who gets caught and made an example of...
It's one thing for someone to say 'Joey has an extra year of eligibility (a fact) and may want to use it somewhere closer to home or at a more competitive program...' and the response is, 'yeah, Joey would get a lot of interest', (that exchange itself would be a violation), but if someone then discusses with a coach what the 'deal' would be, say scholarship money, etc...you betcha that heads would roll over that.
And why risk it?
That's what the portal allows to happen without a problem.
That was 9 years ago. A lot has changed.
Namely players are getting reached out to directly by aggressive alumni and powerbrokers of other schools. Some kids want to only go to a certain school and if that can't happen they don't want to be listed in the portal. It puts them in a precarious position if the school they want to go to doesn't accept them for whatever reason.
There are a myriad of reasons as to why a player might not want to portal. And there are ways for them not to have to portal until the last minute.
Until the NCAA comes down with a hammer on a school/player doing this, it's not going to change, and is likely to get a lot worse.
Why risk it? Why not, no one seems to be paying a price for it.
My point is less about the specific sort of infraction, but rather how schools treat potential compliance violations. And I very much doubt that has changed in 7 or 9 years. I also don't think his school's compliance officers (Ivy) were way more careful than what would have happened at say a Big 10 or ACC school. At least in non-revenue sports. Maybe someone will argue that Ivies care more about following rules than do other leagues, but that's not going to be my assumption.
sure, some big money programs have always skirted the various rules, sometimes quite consciously and conspiratorially...and when found out, big scandals.
But doing so with non-revenue sports is really foolhardy.
The example you give of having only one potential destination school desired, and if that doesn't happen they'll stick with their current school, would be an obvious and egregious abuse of the process and both the athlete and any destination school that participated in backdoor discussions would deserve whatever punishment meted out.
There's nothing at all wrong with wanting to leave your school. There's also nothing wrong with wanting to let people know you're at least open to considering moving...sure, your current team mates and coaches may look at you and wonder whether you're 'all in' with them, but the truth is, you're not. Until you decide to be...and if so, you can withdraw from the portal.
I take your word for it that there are athletes and schools currently playing this game, and if no one gets 'hammered' for it, "it'll get worse".
But If there's an athlete or parent out there reading this thread, don't be the one the hammer comes down on...it ain't worth it.
It's easy to avoid that happening.
The schools aren't necessarily involved until such time as they have to be. It's all done through back channeling.
Kid wants to go to a certainly school. Coach or someone connected to that school gets reached out to through various intermediaries- players, old high school coach, friend, whatever.
Coach does some due diligence such as grades to see if they can get into their school, which probably isn't likely to be an issue, perhaps a conversation gets set up, then voila. Go in the portal and we can officially make this happen.
There are kids not in the portal right now that have different schools they are going to.
The NCAA is a mess in it's current state. You'd have to be doing something really egregious to get in any real trouble at this point, and even then it's probably not very likely. You can literally pay players now across sports. The veneer of amateur sports is over, and with it, just about everything else that guided it prior.
This is a much broader discussion. What role does the NCAA play moving forward? I have no idea.
I realize that we have our share of knuckleheads in the coaching ranks, but I'd like to think that most of these guys know the rules and would do no more than say to old buddy who mentions a kid, 'sure, we'd love to have a guy like that...if he goes in the portal I'll be happy to discuss it". But due diligence on grades??? Scholarship $ ???
Sure hope not...and a coach who does, should be toast.
And sure, school compliance officers generally don't know about a potential violation until someone flags it for them, it's not as if they're patrolling each kid's activities...so, for instance in my son's case it was his own coach who told him that he needed to go talk to compliance and tell them the situation, while also telling him that he didn't think it was an actual violation...but he'd need to be suspended from practice until they got back a clear thumbs up answer from the NCAA...the compliance officer just helped facilitate that reach out. NCAA took forever to respond (over a month) which was a pain in the tail...the point is it was his own coach and school that took the matter seriously, not wanting any possibility of an unreported violation to occur.
Maybe that's changed, but a willful violation of the rules by lots of coaches?
Sounds like a gamble...
Again, big money sports have some different dynamics.
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Re: Transfer Portal 2024
Organized crime works the same way … or is that statement redundant?Wheels wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 2:13 pm The Athletic did a story last week about tampering in college football. It is rampant. Coaches will call other coaches to tell them to stop, but no one will go to the NCAA about it. The big fear, it seems, is that a coach won't know if his own house in order and gets a boomerang NCAA violation. There's probably also some "snitches/ditches" worry. Blow the whistle on someone and get black balled.
DocBarrister
@DocBarrister