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Bellarmine - Atlantic Sun Conference

Really like the idea of Bellarmine University moving to Division I and possibly joining the Atlantic Sun Conference.

The competition for students is getting more and more cutthroat and differentiating BU from other small private universities will be tougher each year. Moving to DI will give BU national exposure and excite the alumni of the university.

All it will take is getting a bid to the NCAA tournament and getting a win. Who knew about Gonzaga 20 years ago? Davidson, Loyola of Chicago?

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Florida Gulf Coast University -- Fort Myers, Florida
Jacksonville University -- Jacksonville, Florida
Kennesaw State University -- Kennesaw, Georgia
Liberty University -- Lynchburg, Virginia
Lipscomb University -- Nashville, Tennessee
New Jersey Institute of Technology -- Newark, New Jersey
University of North Alabama -- Florence, Alabama
University of North Florida -- Jacksonville, Florida
Stetson University -- Deland, Florida

Vince Tyra

It's now been a little over a year (March 26) since Vince Tyra was named A.D. at UofL and to this Card fan he has done a good job. I was (and still am) a fan of Tom Jurich and the job he did here but that doesn't diminish how I feel about Vince. Since he was my former neighbor I knew him and thought well of him. He became involved with the Oxmoor Country Club where I was a member and did a miracle job of putting the club on sound financial footing. Since he was (I think) the former CFO for Fruit of the Loom he obviously knows something about finances. That will serve him and the Cardinal Athletic Department well going forward. He has made the right moves on coaching hires and I think we are in a much better position to win big in both basketball and football. He has retained all the top coaches and the Louisville athletic program looks strong going forward.
He has managed to stay above the mess created by former interim President Postel and his irrational firings that put UofL in the crosshairs of the media.
UofL athletics is in good hands going forward.

Go figure, the thrill of sports.

The Cardinal baseball team is one of the reasons I love sports. Only in team sports can a situation turn around so quickly and with such good results. Eleven days ago on Sunday April 7 the Cards were two down in a three game series with Clemson and about to lose a third game for the first conference sweep of the Cards at home since anyone can remember.
After tying the game in the top of the 7th the Cards got one base runner in the next three innings and then came the top of the 11th. The Cards exploded for five hits and three runs and have never looked back. They went into the Clemson game batting under .260, one of the worse team averages in the last several seasons and maybe since Dan McDonnell arrived.
Today they are batting .278 as a team and since that 11th inning have won five straight games including a sweep of the #4 ranked North Carolina State.
Beginning in that 11th inning the Cards are 84 of 210 for a .400 batting average. They have hit six home runs while hitting only 21 in the previous 32 games.
That's why I love sports. This is one old guy that misses the joy and excitement of playing the game.

NCAA D-1 Council Could Vote to Change Grad Transfer Rule

By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Sports WriterApr 16, 2019 4:55 PM
Football and basketball coaches may be less likely to add graduate transfers to their teams under a change being considered by the NCAA.

The NCAA Division I Council is expected to vote by Friday on an amendment that would require a grad transfer to count against a teams scholarship total for two years, no matter how much eligibility the player has left when they arrive. An exception would be made for athletes who complete graduate degree requirements before the start of the second year.

The proposal targets what critics say is in big-time college athletics. Current rules allow athletes who have earned an undergraduate degree to transfer to another school without sitting out a season, as is usually required by the NCAA of undergraduates.

Grad transfers can be a quick fix for coaches trying to plug holes on a roster and the freedom has been a boon to athletes looking for more playing time. But some administrators say the rule has drifted away from its original intent and graduate transfers are rarely completing those advanced degrees.


The so-called graduate degree is really not the aspiration, Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. The aspiration is to be featured, and usually featured at a higher level.

Changing the rule could slow the flow of grad transfers by making coaches more reluctant to take on players with only with one year of eligibility remaining.

Roster management is such a critical component of every collegiate coach and then to say that youre going to burn a scholarship for another year afterward, where an individual is not even playing, thats obviously a pretty high price, said Todd Berry, the executive director of the American Football Coaches Association.

High-profile quarterbacks, such as former Alabama star Jalen Hurts who is now at Oklahoma, often garner headlines when they transfer as grad students. Still, the majority of football players taking this route are far less accomplished.

Stanford coach David Shaw, whose program routinely operates below the major-college maximum of 85 scholarship players, said he would not hesitate to bring in a star-level player as a grad transfer even if it meant having an vacant scholarship the next season. But teams could be less inclined to take that hit with a lesser player.

I have a tough time justifying putting constraints on someone who would accept a grad transfer because were talking about some of the best class of young people, Shaw said. These guys have graduated. They have done what they needed to do.

In mens basketball, where the scholarship limit is 13 per team, graduate transfers have become even more prevalent.

Bringing in graduate transfers can help a coach quickly rebuild. Texas Tech reached the NCAA Tournament championship game with graduate transfers Matt Mooney and Tariq Owens playing key roles. Often mid-major conference basketball coaches watch their best players jump to more prominent conferences through grad transfers.

(The proposed rule change) may help programs like us in the Big Sky or the Big West, the WAC, where were investing four years in these young men and sometimes youre losing out on the best year they can give you, in terms of the fifth year after the redshirt year, Northern Arizona coach Jack Murphy said. A lot of people say something has to change. I dont know if something has to change, but it would definitely make programs think long and hard if theyre going commit two years of resources for only one year.

The proposed amendment comes during a time of sweeping reform of NCAA transfer rules.

Athletes are from their current school to be contacted by other schools when they decide to transfer. They can simply notify their schools of intent to transfer and have their names placed in an NCAA database. Once listed in the so-called transfer portal an athlete can be recruited by any school.

The NCAA also to give more undergraduates a chance to become immediately eligible to compete after transferring. Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields and Miami quarterback Tate Martell are among those who have received a waiver to play in 2019 after transferring following the 2018 season.

The latest proposal was crafted by the Division I Councils transfer working group, which also came up with the notification model. All 32 Division I conferences are represented on the council.

Bowlsby, who is not on the council, said a majority of the 10 athletic directors in the Big 12 were against the proposal. Mid-American Conference Commissioner Jon Steinbrecher, who represents the MAC on the council and was part of the working group, said his league is for it.

Steinbrecher also said the proposal had strong support coming out of the working group, which had representation from throughout Division I.

If you dont like the idea of free-flowing grad transfers, which is essentially what we have right now, Steinbrecher said, Im not sure why you would be opposed to whats being proposed.

AP College Basketball Writer John Marshall in Phoenix contributed to this report.
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OT: College Tuition Cost Increases Quantified

This is a good summary of how College Tuition costs have increased from 1970 through 2018. What's particularly good is that it is broken into Privates vs Publics, and also how it uses actual then-year dollars as well as comparison-inflated-to-today dollars.

Also good is that there is little "analysis", so that the reader may form and then explore their own opinions as to causes.

The data is presented in approx 5 year increment periods.

Here is the 1970-1971 vs 2018-2019 comparison:

1970-71:
Public: $2,697/year (these dollars are inflated to today's dollars)
Private: $11,933/year (dollars are inflated to today's dollars)

2018-19:
Public: $10,339/year (actual current dollars)
Private: $36,386/year (actual current dollars)

Thus it is 3.83 x as costly to attend Public colleges --
and 3.10 x as costly to attend Private colleges.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/college-cost-graduated-high-school

UofL: Major Announcement Expected Wednesday

The University of Louisville plans to make an announcement Wednesday that it says will be "game changing for the university, the city and the commonwealth."

According to a news advisory, U of L will announce a partnership with a multinational technology company. Further details about the partnership were not disclosed.

Full story: http://bit.ly/2GrluCs
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