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Post by believeinthebeavs on Jul 2, 2020 11:54:33 GMT -8
Are there similar cases out there that have been successful? I believe there is a case from utah where the girl was injured the same number of games in that was granted a sixth year of eligibility.
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Post by Werebeaver on Jul 2, 2020 12:25:26 GMT -8
I don't know the total argument in Kat's first request, but I believe this appeal will be more all encompassing. I am neither an attorney, nor do I play one on TV, but Kat has a real attorney, and I think they will use every aspect of this case, including the totality of her injuries, total rehab time (which stretched well into last season), while also looking at players in similar situations who did receive the extra year, among other factors. Normally I'm all about what is best for the team, in this case I'll be more thrilled for Kat if she wins, and what it means for the team is just an added bonus. Attorneys ain’t cheap. I hope they succeed because if not they may wish they had spent those thousands of dollars on something more rewarding.
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Post by orange123 on Jul 2, 2020 14:55:05 GMT -8
What’s more rewarding then this?!?
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Post by Werebeaver on Jul 2, 2020 15:39:13 GMT -8
What’s more rewarding then this?!? Lots, if they get turned down.
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Post by believeinthebeavs on Jul 2, 2020 15:55:36 GMT -8
Considering the potential to increase her chances of playing professional ball, maybe not the wnba but overseas, it must be worth it to the Tudors. I personally support their efforts.
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Post by Werebeaver on Jul 2, 2020 16:12:06 GMT -8
Considering the potential to increase her chances of playing professional ball, maybe not the wnba but overseas, it must be worth it to the Tudors. I personally support their efforts. I hope they succeed as well.
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beav74
Freshman
Posts: 706
Grad Year: OSU 1974
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Post by beav74 on Jul 2, 2020 19:38:27 GMT -8
My opinion is...appeals by the school are probably rejected more than accepted. Court appeals by a family.....who knows? Not sure if there is a statistic on that?
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Post by beavs6 on Jul 3, 2020 3:27:20 GMT -8
My take... What has Kat's family saved in education costs to date? What does another year at OSU on scholarship save $? If there is a good chance of an appeal working and attorney fees are less than what another year at OSU would cost(and Kat wants another year of schooling) then go for it. I hope for her, the Team, and OSU she is granted another year of eligibility.
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Post by TheGlove on Jul 3, 2020 5:25:57 GMT -8
Assumptions are that if she was granted another year she’d stay at OSU and not grad transfer?
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Post by Werebeaver on Jul 3, 2020 7:12:57 GMT -8
Assumptions are that if she was granted another year she’d stay at OSU and not grad transfer? That option certainly would be available to her. If she and her family thought that a different playing situation would enhance her chances for an overseas professional opportunity. Of course I would like to see her play at Oregon State.
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Post by zeroposter on Jul 3, 2020 9:15:16 GMT -8
My opinion is...appeals by the school are probably rejected more than accepted. Court appeals by a family.....who knows? Not sure if there is a statistic on that? Beware of the injunction. Lolol. Lonnie Shelton memory. Apples and oranges. And a long time ago. Good luck, Kat.
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Post by pitbeavs on Jul 3, 2020 9:22:17 GMT -8
Assumptions are that if she was granted another year she’d stay at OSU and not grad transfer? That's ludicrous. Thanks for the laugh, though. Someone eat all the Fruit Loops again?
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Post by beavershoopsfan on Jul 3, 2020 9:25:33 GMT -8
Are there similar cases out there that have been successful? I believe there is a case from utah where the girl was injured the same number of games in that was granted a sixth year of eligibility. The poster is referring to Daneesha Provo from the University of Utah. She started her collegiate career at Clemson in '14-'15 and withdrew from school during her frosh season in January 2015 due to personal reasons. She then transferred to Utah and played three-plus seasons for Utah prior to sustaining a season-ending knee injury on the same PAC-12 weekend in January 2019 that both Tudor and Stanford's Nadia Fingall were injured. The speculated rationale for Provo being granted an extra year of eligibility by the NCAA is that her partial season in '18-'19 combined with her partial season in '14-'15 as a frosh combined to be the winning formula to being granted the opportunity to play as a redshirt senior in '19-'20.
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Post by bvrbooster on Jul 3, 2020 10:12:13 GMT -8
Assumptions are that if she was granted another year she’d stay at OSU and not grad transfer? That's ludicrous. Thanks for the laugh, though. Why is that ludicrous? If she wants to pursue a Masters in a field that OSU doesn't offer, why wouldn't she transfer? Try living in another area of the country? Be nearer her boyfriend? Who knows? There are many possible reasons. Why did Ellie Mack leave a program where she had become the conference's player of the year?
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Post by beaverwbb fan on Jul 3, 2020 10:23:17 GMT -8
That's ludicrous. Thanks for the laugh, though. Why is that ludicrous? If she wants to pursue a Masters in a field that OSU doesn't offer, why wouldn't she transfer? Try living in another area of the country? Be nearer her boyfriend? Who knows? There are many possible reasons. Why did Ellie Mack leave a program where she had become the conference's player of the year? Mack had to leave. Bucknell does not allow athletes to have a fifth year.
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