Again, the first go around with Shea was shady. Unless the family already got all the money they want I expect this time will be the same. No chance we get involved.
Just follow Sean Patterson’s “career”- hired as GA at Arizona when Shea verballed to Rich Rod then moved to LSU when Shea was looking to stay home then was quickly hired at Ole Miss as Shea flipped on signing day.
Only those in their last year of eligibility get to play immediately in the event of transferring away from sanctions.
On the recommendation of the Committee on Infractions, for a student-athlete who transfers to a member institution to continue the student-athlete’s opportunity for full participation in a sport because the student-athlete’s original institution was placed on probation by the NCAA with sanctions that would preclude the institution’s team in that sport from participating in postseason competition during all of the remaining seasons of the student-athlete’s eligibility.
Their could be an exception for Patterson, but probably not.
If Patterson transfers, he’ll probably have to sit out next season. That’s the standard NCAA rule. There might be some mechanism available to Patterson and other Rebels to play immediately, given the school’s current situation. But the official rulebook exception doesn’t cover Patterson because he’s got two years left of college eligibility, while Ole Miss’ postseason ban only covers one of those .
Another Rebel, sophomore safety Deontay Anderson, is suing the program and alleging he was misled during his recruitment. He wants to be eligible immediately elsewhere and is reportedly petitioning the NCAA for immediate eligibility. It’s not clear how that petition will unfold, but non-graduate transfers almost always have to sit a season.
Will be chinteresting to see how it plays out with the OM kids, but generally you're sitting a year. Patterson expecting to be able to play right away just means he's likely to be disappointed. I'd be shocked if Anderson's petition succeeds.
He’s been a productive coach. Also coached at Sam Houston State and we all know UW wants to recruit in Texas.
I don’t like that he’s a pass happy, air raid guy, but other than that, it’s a big hire.
When OM hired him one of the big things my Roobs raved about what his ability to run the ball in addition to throwing it (with Chad Kelly OM had basically no running game). Not sure if those reports held up, but it was definitely something they liked about the hire.
He’s been a productive coach. Also coached at Sam Houston State and we all know UW wants to recruit in Texas.
I don’t like that he’s a pass happy, air raid guy, but other than that, it’s a big hire.
When OM hired him one of the big things my Roobs raved about what his ability to run the ball in addition to throwing it (with Chad Kelly OM had basically no running game). Not sure if those reports held up, but it was definitely something they liked about the hire.
Bonerpopper isn’t necessarily someone you want to move on from because you can certainly do much worse and our on field performance by and large is very good ... you can clearly see players getting better
But at the same time, I do think you have to seriously question whether he can get that elite RB out of California like we were able to do in the early 90s like Nip
PL: “Yeah, I’ll be heading to Pullman next week, go see Mike and watch some of the things they’re doing.”
SECC: Obviously, Leach has heavily influenced how you run an offense. How does your specific version of the Air Raid compare to others who run it?
PL: “At some point I feel like it’s important to have an emphasis on the run game. I don’t particularly care if we throw or run it 70 times to win a game… As long as it’s what the defense is giving us, I’m all for it. From a pass game standpoint, it is all Air Raid. From an offensive philosophy standpoint, it’s all that philosophy — chasing space. I think the run game is what makes it a little different. The tempo, a smaller play list, are some things that’re the most similar. Mike is the purest. He’s going to run it the same way, and they’re going to be really good at it. Kliff Kingsbury on the other hand is a great creativity guy. He thinks outside the box. He’s able to scheme up some wrinkles that are touchdown plays each week. And I think he’s one of the best at doing that. I probably fall somewhere in between the two of them in terms of approach.”
Comments
They might be making another sanctions exception for the OM kids.
Ole Miss only got banned for this year and next year. Shea has two years of eligibility remaining so he would not get the waiver.
Just follow Sean Patterson’s “career”- hired as GA at Arizona when Shea verballed to Rich Rod then moved to LSU when Shea was looking to stay home then was quickly hired at Ole Miss as Shea flipped on signing day.
link
Only those in their last year of eligibility get to play immediately in the event of transferring away from sanctions. Their could be an exception for Patterson, but probably not. Will be chinteresting to see how it plays out with the OM kids, but generally you're sitting a year. Patterson expecting to be able to play right away just means he's likely to be disappointed. I'd be shocked if Anderson's petition succeeds.
He might expect to get exempt but there's no reason to think he will be.
I don’t like that he’s a pass happy, air raid guy, but other than that, it’s a big hire.
Bonerpopper isn’t necessarily someone you want to move on from because you can certainly do much worse and our on field performance by and large is very good ... you can clearly see players getting better
But at the same time, I do think you have to seriously question whether he can get that elite RB out of California like we were able to do in the early 90s like Nip
On the one hand, that's so racist. On the other, that's so right.
I only see one way out of this.
https://www.seccountry.com/mississippi/ole-miss-football-rebels-phil-longo-air-raid-shea-patterson
SECC: You’re going up to Washington State?
PL: “Yeah, I’ll be heading to Pullman next week, go see Mike and watch some of the things they’re doing.”
SECC: Obviously, Leach has heavily influenced how you run an offense. How does your specific version of the Air Raid compare to others who run it?
PL: “At some point I feel like it’s important to have an emphasis on the run game. I don’t particularly care if we throw or run it 70 times to win a game… As long as it’s what the defense is giving us, I’m all for it. From a pass game standpoint, it is all Air Raid. From an offensive philosophy standpoint, it’s all that philosophy — chasing space. I think the run game is what makes it a little different. The tempo, a smaller play list, are some things that’re the most similar. Mike is the purest. He’s going to run it the same way, and they’re going to be really good at it. Kliff Kingsbury on the other hand is a great creativity guy. He thinks outside the box. He’s able to scheme up some wrinkles that are touchdown plays each week. And I think he’s one of the best at doing that. I probably fall somewhere in between the two of them in terms of approach.”