Flip, it is not against any rules. And there is no reason for it to be against any rules and trying to make it illegal would be disastrous.
BigBrew22, I think your last post is crazy. Make that your last 2
d_fense wrote:Flip, it is not against any rules. And there is no reason for it to be against any rules and trying to make it illegal would be disastrous.
BigBrew22, I think your last post is crazy. Make that your last 2
Bigbrew22 wrote:Don't kid yourself Winner very few crooked public schools might do this. 99% arnt wasting their efforts doing this "big business" the truth is none of these small town schools have the money, resources or influence to do any sort of recruiting so give me a break. It doesn't apply to small schools
d_fense wrote:Flip, it is not against any rules. And there is no reason for it to be against any rules and trying to make it illegal would be disastrous.
BigBrew22, I think your last post is crazy. Make that your last 2
sportsphenom wrote:d_fense wrote:Flip, it is not against any rules. And there is no reason for it to be against any rules and trying to make it illegal would be disastrous.
BigBrew22, I think your last post is crazy. Make that your last 2
False, as seen in the by-laws Article V, Section II
A school may be suspended
e. For unduly influencing a student to attend school or by offering or giving any
remuneration either directly or indirectly to influence him/her to attend or his/her family
to reside in a given district in order to establish the student's eligibility on the team or
activities of the school
Mandan wrote:If Catholics try to get people in their parish to send their kids to the local Catholic high school, I see nothing wrong with that. In fact, there sometimes in pressure put on, asking "why are you sending your kids to the public school". If the student happens to be a good athlete, that would be a bonus, but not the main reason they'd be wanting them in the school. Higher enrollment = more tuition money = a more stable school.
Now, if a Catholic high school goes to the Baptist 8th grader and tries to get them to come to the school, promising them more playing time or even a starting role, that is a whole different story. Not that non-Catholics can't or don't attend a Catholic school, but making athletics the focus of going to the school would be questionable.
And this is also why people want names. With all these recruiting allegations over the years, let's hear some actual names so we can determine if it is true or not. I will never believe any Trinity recruiting talk without specific names. When I was at Trinity, it was probably 99% Catholic, so the athletes are all Catholic and probably even went to Catholic grade school, so you can't accuse any of them of being "recruited" in some malicious way.
scoobyx2 wrote:sportsphenom wrote:d_fense wrote:Flip, it is not against any rules. And there is no reason for it to be against any rules and trying to make it illegal would be disastrous.
BigBrew22, I think your last post is crazy. Make that your last 2
False, as seen in the by-laws Article V, Section II
A school may be suspended
e. For unduly influencing a student to attend school or by offering or giving any
remuneration either directly or indirectly to influence him/her to attend or his/her family
to reside in a given district in order to establish the student's eligibility on the team or
activities of the school
If I am a parent who sends his kids to a private school, and I convince my neighbor to send their kids to the school, is that recruiting? Or a billboard or mailer. Or are we claiming that a school official actually contacts a specific kid or family to attend the school?
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