The Brown basketball team has made the NCAA tournament twice: 1939 and 1986. They are 0-2 in the NCAAs, and in their last appearance Cuse beat the Brown Bears by 49.
Just Indoor track. Does not include cross country and outdoor
Dr Ohl from WFUBMC weighs in
https://www.journalnow.com/z-no-dig...cial&utm_source=email&utm_campaign=user-share
I think I might've guessed them as one of the little handful of schools that had never gone.The Brown basketball team has made the NCAA tournament twice: 1939 and 1986. They are 0-2 in the NCAAs, and in their last appearance Cuse beat the Brown Bears by 49.
Not the most promising outlook for reopening schools and having fall football. However, good, balanced article as he sees both sides.
If the mandate is to avoid all risks then society will never reopen. There are risks in life. And the risk to young athletes from covid death is miniscule. Time for the alarmism to stop and for folks to start accepting life as it is.
If the mandate is to avoid all risks then society will never reopen. There are risks in life. And the risk to young athletes from covid death is miniscule. Time for the alarmism to stop and for folks to start accepting life as it is.
This is an interesting question. Would kids just find out a the summer before that they are no longer on scholarship? That would suck. Even the schools cancelling programs are keeping their folks on scholarship.
If the NCAA reduced the football scholarships, the reduction would not be imposed immediately to avoid that exact situation. The recruction would be phased in over a few years so that no player would lose his ship. 85 in 2020; 82 in 2021 and so on to get to 80 or 75.[/QUOTE
I don't see any way that any cuts can happen for the next year without lawsuits flying all over the place. The pandemic will be the excuse for the plan, similar to what is going on in minor league baseball where contraction just got accelerated.
If you had 100 skittles and 1 of them was a death sentence would you eat the skittles? That’s what we’re living in now. Maybe some people will and I love sports but if I was a college athlete there is no way in hell I’d take that chance just to play some football in front of an empty stadium....especially if had little to no chance of a professional football career.
The death rate for North Carolinians under 65 years of age is 3 per 100,000, not 1 per 100, but keep on with the alarmism.
I think it's more likely to see football scholarships cut from 85 to 75 than see two MBB scholarships cut. The four game rule paved the way for this.
I can't see men's basketball losing scholarships. I know there are differences in scholarships between some men's and women's sports, but I think it would be tough for there to be an imbalance between scholarships in men's and women's basketball given that they're both revenue sports.