MDSpider8
Bench player
We have our first transfer out of the offseason. Not very surprised by this. Never was able to establish himself after the breakout performance at Belmont.
Mooney gets a cut.Ripped by Weave. How apropos for UR.
Correct. I suppose you call this “the basketball major”.He will be headed to his fourth school?
There is no way he will ever get a degree.He will be headed to his fourth school?
I hear you, but every kid is different. Plenty, as in thousands, of kids go to school for only basketball reasons. Maybe transferring multiple times is best for them? So, why not keep trying for the best fit in the portal? What's the alternative? Stay here and probably be unhappy having another year like last year? I know kids who have transferred multiple times and been way more happier at their new place than previous places.Another sad case of 4 schools in 4 years. I hope he gets a degree, but would be surprised if he is able to next year (I guess some of that depends where he transfers to). That level of turnover cannot be good for a young man’s development (in basketball or in general), and I really feel for the guys who are put in this situation where they feel transferring 4 times is best for them. But heaven forbid you put any type of restriction on player movement. Yet another reason I’m starting to check out from this program and college sports in general.
Agree 100%.This may be an unpopular opinion here but why do we (society, our university) stress getting a degree so much? To me a university should be a place of higher learning, of course, but really more general in that a place where it can help one pursue his or her dreams. Why can’t someone pursue basketball as a career/dream and that is deemed less socially acceptable than whatever office job they get from a degree. We can have a compromise by creating a sports management, sports marketing or entrepreneurial major.
If a kid really wants to pursue basketball as a career then essentially college is their internship to showcase professional teams their abilities. I don’t see that any differently of someone wanting to pursue a career in finance or being premed/pre law or something like that. If a guy really wants to pursue basketball, what benefit would taking classes he does not want to pursue a degree he does not intend to use, be?
Now if someone wants to do both, absolutely! I think we all recognize that the likelihood of being a professional athlete is slim and the career only lasts until someone is around 35. So I think if someone has other passions outside of basketball, that getting a degree can be a valuable tool for them. Still, it’s up to them to decide what is best for their lives and in my eyes, a mission of the university should be to give them the tools necessary to achieve those dream.
Would be interested to hear others thoughts on this.
This is nothing personal against Thomas. Agree that he seems like a good guy and he’s given us no reason to believe otherwise. I feel by allowing kids to transfer anytime they want, we are failing to teach perseverance and patience. College is as much about growing as a person as it is getting a degree or excelling at a sport.I hear you, but every kid is different. Plenty, as in thousands, of kids go to school for only basketball reasons. Maybe transferring multiple times is best for them? So, why not keep trying for the best fit in the portal? What's the alternative? Stay here and probably be unhappy having another year like last year? I know kids who have transferred multiple times and been way more happier at their new place than previous places.
If the issue is life after college, Thomas seems like a good guy with good character. If I am interviewing a guy for a job, I would take a high character guy who has transferred multiple times over a guy with lesser character who stayed at one place his whole career every time.
I wish the best for Thomas and hope he finds a good fit and has a fun final year.
On a personal level, I agree with you 100%. For instance, I had been recruited to play soccer at some no name division 3 schools, but decided not to pursue that because I recognized that professional soccer isn’t going to be a viable option and those schools were no where near the academic profile of Richmond.As for the degree argument, if a player is capable of making basketball their career, I agree that a degree does not matter. Thomas is a solid player, but I would be surprised if he ends up playing much basketball after college. As a kid, it’s easy to be short sighted and think that college basketball is forever. The NCAA (at least in my mind) has a duty to protect the athletes from thoughts like this, and from people like agents who may be selling guys dreams that are unrealistic. For most college athletes, having a degree to fall back on when “going pro” falls through is a huge benefit.
I’m all for the athletes trying to maximize their earnings while they’re in school, but for guys like Thomas, are they really making so much money in college that they can throw a degree out the window and forego the earning potential that comes with it?
The present state of the UR Mens BB program is not even in the same universe.Duke is fine with that because not only does the student athlete get the benefit of using Duke to propel their career, Duke gets the benefit of having their university be marketed throughout the country. Same thing at UR, to a lesser extent
Doesn’t take away the fact we’ve had a lot of players who’ve played here go on to have some sort of professional basketball career somewhere in the world. Don’t know how lucrative it is but if you get paid doing it, by definition you’re a professional.The present state of the UR Mens BB program is not even in the same universe.