Gbr SquareOffs

16%
Yes

0

84%
No WINNER

25

16%
Yes

0 Comment
No one has commented yet

84%
No

24 Comments
donniemahoney
4
donniemahoney

It only hurts the student athlete. But that is what the NCAA always tries to do.

Reply
Lou Cabello
Lou Cabello

all i think this is is the ncaa being afraid to govern the scc conference because they dont want an compatition

Rory Cook
1
Rory Cook

It only hurts the kids whose parents can afford to haul them around the country for camps. Stupid ruling by the NCAA and those six conferences. 2 that wanted to stop it and 4 who can't afford to do

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Andrew Shields
1
Andrew Shields

Paid off by the ACC and SEC

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Daniel Revas
1
Daniel Revas

This is proof that the SEC and ESPN are ruling College Football, and not in a good way. There are a lot of kids in the South that live in real poverty. They can't afford to go anywhere to Camp more than a short drive from home. Which is how the SEC and ACC like it.

Reply
Brian
0
Brian

Mike Leach said it best. The only reason anyone would want them banned is either they're lazy or they're selfishly guarding their recruiting area.

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Kevin Hamilton
0
Kevin Hamilton

Just another way to keep the SEC on top.

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Scott Ferguson
0
Scott Ferguson

Seems they want the SEC ACC to have every advantage available?

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Matt Honke
0
Matt Honke

Anything that limits the opportunities for student athletes is a move in the wrong direction by the NCAA, and this limits opportunities. In addition, with official paid JR year visits not available yet, it is difficult for NU to get players onto campus until their SR year, which can be too late.

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Visitor
0
Visitor

What's wrong with giving young men exposure to opportunities?

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Jerry Williams
0
Jerry Williams

it does not help potential student athletes, especially those without the money to travel. Another door slams in the face of the lower income. A compromise between no camps and going wild with camps should have been reached.

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Brenden Stai
0
Brenden Stai

Where is the democratic process. How about conducting a panel of all conferences to see if it is a viable option to create a bit more parody among them. Rather, let the powers that may be; ie SEC- inparticular Alabama Nick Saben...who, o BTW have 2 private jets to use to go after 4/5 star HS athlete

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Timothy Costello
0
Timothy Costello

Whatever is best for the student/athlete.

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Mike Dwiggins
0
Mike Dwiggins

Underprivileged high school kids' exposure will be diminished or limited to just those universities in their region, and will not see additional opportunities/offers from other outside universities.

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Jerry L. Hammon
0
Jerry L. Hammon

The only reason this has happened is that the SEC is trying to protect its territory at the expense of the student-athlete. The SEC wants to cherry pick and leave the also rans scrambling for schools to attend,

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Christopher Richling
0
Christopher Richling

This hurts athletes, but it hurts poor athletes more than anyone else.

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Rizeabuv Yorzelf
0
Rizeabuv Yorzelf

Especially hurts Nebraska. Helps the schools with a Ton of talent in their backyard.

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Stephen Johnson
0
Stephen Johnson

Just a ruling to protect home terf advantage in populus states. Hurts the opportunity of players.

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Lou Cabello
0
Lou Cabello

southen teams must rof a little competition

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Arlie Rauch
0
Arlie Rauch

It's difficult to grasp how a regulation or restriction imposed from the top down can improve competition and help the quality of play. But that's not what they had in mind, of course.

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Todd Brindley
0
Todd Brindley

Did the NCAA indicate why this was in the best interest of the Student-Athlete? Satellite camps provided more opportunities for the Student Athlete to gain exposure to coaches and programs they otherwise wouldn't. This is the SEC tail wagging the NCAA dog, protecting its 'turf'.

Reply
Visitor
0
Visitor

For northern schools, it is a chance to have greater visibility in the warmer climates. The southern schools do not want to lose recruits to the northern schools running camps in their back yard!

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Ron Huffman
0
Ron Huffman

College's should be able to go anywhere for more exposure. ..Ncaa is wrong and corrupt. ..siding with the sec . conference. .

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Valerie Gilmore
0
Valerie Gilmore

the NCAA is put in place to further the student athlete not hinder them. and there won't be any push back on this either i'm guessing. what's SEC stand for?

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Dan Cubrich
Dan Cubrich

Valerie, does the SEC = Southern effing corruption?

Andrew LaFevre
0
Andrew LaFevre

Everyone should know by now

Reply

67%
Absolutely WINNER

4

33%
No Way

1

67%
Absolutely

4 Comments
Brian
0
Brian

If it didn't look like I would crack the depth chart at QB, absolutely.

Reply
Mike Myers
0
Mike Myers

He's commited to play and a great athelete

Reply
Christopher Richling
0
Christopher Richling

If football was my dream, then I would do everything I could to make sure that I could do it as long as possible and as at high a level as possible. For me, I understand the dream of playing QB, but I understand the dream of playing football even more.

Reply

33%
No Way

1 Comment
Robert Lloyd
0
Robert Lloyd

I love Zack Darlington and I loved his control of last years Spring Game. I could not do what he is doing with the switch but he is just a great athlete and he wants to play. My guess, being now an ex QB, he has great hands as a receiver. Go Big Red!

Reply

31%
Mostly Positive

2

69%
Mostly Negative WINNER

18

31%
Mostly Positive

2 Comments
David DeVries
1
David DeVries

Pull yourself together folks...We all thought Bo was the answer. Guess what? He wasn't remotely the answer. Harvey made the tough decision that were necessary. He didn't 't coach. He didn't coach. What he did, was his job. His decision about Riley will pay off.

Reply
Isaiah Skrdla
Isaiah Skrdla

He was directly involved with firing two 9 win coaches and replacing them with jokes. I'm constantly hearing that Riley will be a success but nobody can come up with measurable proof to that point.

Ron Ames
0
Ron Ames

Too much focus on a few incidents instead of overall progress of the University -- academics and enrollment made significant gains. Excellent term.

Reply

69%
Mostly Negative

18 Comments
Visitor
15
Visitor

He is a complete narcissist that has lead to the destruction of Husker football. Good Riddance.

Reply
Andrew Graham
5
Andrew Graham

HP was as heavily involved with Athletics as any University Chancellor I can readily remember. Unfortunately, his involvement has stymied the Athletic programs. Please let people with coaching experience run the Athletic office.

Reply
Greg Buxton
5
Greg Buxton

10 weeks before "Teflon Harvey" took over the Huskers played for a National Title. Last season NU had its WORST season in over half-a- century. Nothing EVER stuck to Perlman!

Reply
John Demma
4
John Demma

Treatment of Osborne and lack of football success

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Jim Kohout
4
Jim Kohout

Perlman did one good thing....he got Nebraska into the Big Ten. Unfotunately, for him, he will be remembered most for his poor personality.

Reply
Eric Nuss
3
Eric Nuss

There are no excuses or reasons- only priorities.

Reply
Jim Hanemaayer
3
Jim Hanemaayer

As perhaps the only member of "Russians for Nebraska" in Moscow (or anywhere in Russia for that matter), I do not like the way he treated Coach/AD Osborne at the end.

Reply
Jerry Williams
3
Jerry Williams

Because he always seemed rather aloof. Have not seen any great academic accomplishment from Nebraska since he has been there and did not seem a big supporter of agricultural program.

Reply
Visitor
2
Visitor

He made some bad hires and watched the department descend into the abyss. A very unlikeable man.

Reply
Greg Moore
2
Greg Moore

He set football back 30 years.

Reply
Stephen Johnson
2
Stephen Johnson

To many poor choices in coaches and asst. Coaches. Mostly Callahan

Reply
Meredith Stegman
1
Meredith Stegman

He should have been fired after extending Pedersen's contract. And hiring Pedersen was bad but hiring Eickhorst was worse. Trying to extend Eickhorst sneakily was horrible. He's an idiot

Reply
Visitor
1
Visitor

His poor decisions have set back husker sports years if not Decades counting the days until he is gone.

Reply
Brian
0
Brian

I will remember multiple contract buyouts, a contract extension for Steve Pederson months before he was fired, and overpaying our current AD to come in and find a reason to fire Bo.

Reply
LARRY BAUMANN
0
LARRY BAUMANN

Supporting that clown AD and diseased parasite Riley

Reply
Jared Phillips
0
Jared Phillips

......no comments are necessary

Reply
Larry Warren
0
Larry Warren

Didn't hire Scott Frost to replace Bo.

Reply
Ben Hornig
0
Ben Hornig

The athletic department is still unstable and the academia has taken a step back. A new CBA is great, but you don't become a top school with a good CBA. Science/math/engineering is how you build a top school, and they have been ignored under Perlman's rule.

Reply

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