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Message
re: NCAA committee considering 7-figure fines, head coach suspensions for transfer violations
Posted on 2/27/26 at 11:22 pm to CovingtonTigre
Posted on 2/27/26 at 11:22 pm to CovingtonTigre
quote:
Why do you post like you are in a fight to the death? People can disagree with you and not be stupid.
It's fine if someone has a different opinion than me. But that's not what is going on here.
He's not portraying his argument as opinion, but as fact. And he's pushing a narrative of "look at the history" to support his argument.
So I did. The facts don't support his position, no matter how many times he tries to move the goalposts.
For example: I looked up the NCAA lawsuits results and learned that 2/3 of the lawsuits resulted in an NCAA victory.
After posting the findings, he disregarded them and claimed that the window of time used was too small and that going back further in history is what would prove his point.
Fine. I went back and researched it. The results are as follows:
quote:
NCAA between 1973 and 2020. The NCAA prevailed in 63% of these rulings.
He's still wrong. Most of the posters and pundits are wrong in the belief that the NCAA has no power or is being rendered useless by the courts.
Calling it now: if the NCAA decides to appeal the Chambliss ruling, they will win.
The Ole Miss judge probably pissed them off enough to make the decision to appeal with his recent bullshite towards their legal team.
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