Has Pico ever enrolled in a college or University? If not......then his clock has not started.
I have nothing to contribute to this eligibility talk, but coincidentally to the discussion about Pico, I stumbled upon this YouTube video the other day.
Has Pico ever enrolled in a college or University? If not......then his clock has not started.
Not sure what the rules are these days, but it used to be your clock started once you were out of high school for a year whether you enrolled in college or not.Has Pico ever enrolled in a college or University? If not......then his clock has not started.
And those standards are?There are still the clearing house standards that must be met.
Fair value. I’m sure the evaluation criteria used by the entirely non-partisan committee (actually a contracted law firm) will be entirely fair. For example: A car commercial for a Michigan athlete will be fine at $225,000. Same commercial for a Rutgers athlete might only command $500 ….. NYC market and Rutgers being what they are. As with all things in the world of athlete payments …. everyone will feel fairly treated.And those standards are?
Thanks......but I don't believe that affects eligibility......only compensation. Correct?Fair value. I’m sure the evaluation criteria used by the entirely non-partisan committee (actually a contracted law firm) will be entirely fair. For example: A car commercial for a Michigan athlete will be fine at $225,000. Same commercial for a Rutgers athlete might only command $500 ….. NYC market and Rutgers being what they are. As with all things in the world of athlete payments …. everyone will feel fairly treated.
Might want to go the to NCAA rulebook. That is an excerpt, basically and there are more rules. If they don’t enroll, the clock automatically starts automatically after 12 months post HS graduation.Has Pico ever enrolled in a college or University? If not......then his clock has not started.
And those standards are?
The NCAA: these are our rules. If you like them or not, we have more.Might want to go the to NCAA rulebook. That is an excerpt, basically and there are more rules. If they don’t enroll, the clock automatically starts automatically after 12 months.
I’m not clear what you are referring to. Grads from 10 years ago ran out of eligibility 4 years ago even if they never went to college. Unless they were in the military or a small handful of other reasons than can pause a clock.The above rules apply to recent/current/future grads. I am not sure how the NCAA deals with grads from 10 years ago
I was just wondering when there is a guy with 10 years in military service etc, how eligibility is looked at when require tents change over time. I don't see the test score requirements like in the pastI’m not clear what you are referring to. Grads from 10 years ago ran out of eligibility 4 years ago even if they never went to college. Unless they were in the military or a small handful of other reasons than can pause a clock.
Yep! Eligibility remains a mess and is not affected by the so called “House Settlement”. In regard to NIL compensation, the House v. NCAA settlement established Deloitte as the independent NIL Clearinghouse for reviewing third-party deals over $600 using a 12-factor fair market value analysis. That mechanism is not yet started up and when it does get started, I’m sure it will generate tons of grist for everyone to chew over.Thanks......but I don't believe that affects eligibility......only compensation. Correct?