If Ole Miss folks spinning this into the ground can remove the emotion and look at this for what it is, it is clearly the correct call. The NCAA didn't make him ineligible. They granted the waiver. They just didn't waive the transfer rule. He's not "denied eligibilty" like you are seeing. He just has to wait a year like a normal transfer.
Bottom line, Masoli would've ended his career a Duck if he'd behaved himself. He didn't, and got his *** kicked off the team. So, he tries to use the grad school loophole to play elsewhere. The problem is, he didn't leave in good standing with Oregon. He was kicked off the team. The NCAA didn't say he was ineligible at Oregon, like independencebowlmainstay is spinning it. The NCAA said that he was dismissed at Oregon. He was clearly going elsewhere with the express purpose of playing football, since his current school wouldn't have him. That is not the spirit of the rule.
If it gets overturned, I will be shocked, because removing all the emotion, it's clear that it's the right decision.
Bottom line, Masoli would've ended his career a Duck if he'd behaved himself. He didn't, and got his *** kicked off the team. So, he tries to use the grad school loophole to play elsewhere. The problem is, he didn't leave in good standing with Oregon. He was kicked off the team. The NCAA didn't say he was ineligible at Oregon, like independencebowlmainstay is spinning it. The NCAA said that he was dismissed at Oregon. He was clearly going elsewhere with the express purpose of playing football, since his current school wouldn't have him. That is not the spirit of the rule.
If it gets overturned, I will be shocked, because removing all the emotion, it's clear that it's the right decision.