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Wed, 12 Oct 1994 17:21:23 -0500 |
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At 4:29 AM 10/12/94 -0400, Sean Pickett wrote:
>[log in to unmask] (Mike Machnik) wrote:
>
>>OK, I pored through the NC$$ Manual tonight and came up
>>with the following.
>>
>>12.2.3.2.4.1 deals with the limitation on restoration
>>of eligibility for Major Junior A Ice Hockey, as
>>Charlie pointed out. "...such individual shall be
>>denied at least the first year of intercollegiate
>>athletics competition in the sport of ice hockey at the
>>certifying institution and shall be charged with the
>>loss of at least one season of eligibility in the
>>sport of ice hockey."
>>
>>14.3.2.1.1 deals with DivI partial qualifiers (which
>>apparently Latendresse was because of his SATs). "An
>>entering freshman...who is a partial qualifier...may
>>not practice or compete during the first academic year
>>in residence." And according to 14.3.3(a), partial
>>qualifiers in DivI have only three seasons in which
>>they may compete.
>
>>14.12.1 reads, "If a student-athlete is ineligible
>>under the provisions of the constitution, by-laws or
>>other regulations of the Association, the institution
>>shall be obligated to apply immediately the applicable
>>rule and to withhold the student-athlete from all
>>intercollegiate competition."
I think one of the rules here has been interpreted a couple of different ways.
14.3.2.1.1 specifies that for his first year in RESIDENCE, as a partial
qualifier, he cannot practice or compete. This would seem to be satisfied.
However, the precise wording of 12.2.3.2.4.1 can be seen to address Mike's
original question about concurrence. It says that an individual shall be
denied the first year of COMPETITION. Not his first year "in residence."
Mike's first year in residence was NOT his first year of competition
because of 14.3.2.1.1. '92-'93 was his first year of competition-- which he
should have been denied under 14.3.2.1.1.
Mike, although the rules don't specifically state that ineligibilities
can't be taken concurrently, it does seem that the distinction between
first years of residence and first year of competition might have been
designed to achieve the same thing-- to prevent an athlete with multiple
eligibility problems from killing two birds with one stone.
-Dave
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