Goodbye, Hilton.
Goodbye, hope.
I'm also not understanding the statement about NCAA appeal. Does that mean he can appeal to the NCAA to play even if he doesn't receive his degree from DMACC. If he does receive the degree, what is there to appeal. I thought that's all he needed.
http://amestrib.com/sports/men-s-basketball-isu-signee-malou-declares-nba-draftEven if he does get his academic work completed, Malou has his case in front of the NCAA seeking to extend his eligibility clock. Student-athletes typically are afforded a five-year window to compete following their graduation from high school. There are a number of outcomes that could come from the NCAA, including partial qualifying status, which would mean Malou would have to sit out the 2016-17 season and have one year of eligibility remaining. Prohm said he envisioned Malou bypassing the draft and coming to ISU even in that situation
Does he have any kind of realistic chance of being drafted?
No. I'm not saying he won't possibly have a spot in the NBA but unless he really kills it in workouts, the odds are low of him getting drafted.Does he have any kind of realistic chance of being drafted?
Everyone should relax. This is unexpected but, he was on the NBA radar with rumors Malou could go pro instead of college last year. Not to mention he hasn't been fully cleared by the NCAA yet. Putting his name in now will give him feedback on what he needs to work on and if there is a problem academically it allows him more time to still turn pro instead of being stuck in limbo. He's keeping his options open, probably the smart move. All that said, I fully expect him playing in Ames next year.
No. I'm not saying he won't possibly have a spot in the NBA but unless he really kills it in workouts, the odds are low of him getting drafted.
There is a limitation on how long after you graduate from high school you have to play college ball
http://amestrib.com/sports/men-s-basketball-isu-signee-malou-declares-nba-draft
Honestly I think if he isn't cleared it will be based in eligability not academics. If they rule his clock started when he took some classes at "college" in Australia before coming to the US his eligability will have expired before he ever got to play. If that were the case it would be truly tragic as he has gotten nothing bit a runaround and gone through a ton of hardship for 4 years trying to play.
I didn't think the "clock" started at High School graduation, I thought I started at college enrollment.
There have been numerous people who played major/minor league baseball right out of high school only to go to college later and still compete. See Chris Weinke for example.
Wait, Weren't there people who said that people who were questioning whether he would make it on campus were just trying to stir the pot and that there is nothing to worry about eligibility wise.... So this news can't be true.
I didn't think the "clock" started at High School graduation, I thought I started at college enrollment.
There have been numerous people who played major/minor league baseball right out of high school only to go to college later and still compete. See Chris Weinke for example.
Yeah Hinds has it wrong. The issue is he took a couple classes in Australia right out of HS that started his clock.
Yea, think you are right
I agree and that's what they will rule on. Given his situation it truly would be wrong to deny him. He was a victim of circumstance.I went to high school with a couple of people who took a few college classes starting their high school junior year. Does that mean that they would have 2 years gone from their 5 to play 4 clock before they even graduated from high school? If they aren't taking enough to be considered full time and eligible it doesn't seem like it should be enough to start their clock.
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