ADVERTISEMENT

Should we do the same??

If targeting is a penalty, then it MUST be called on the offense as well. How many times has a ball carrier lowered their head when coming up upon a one-on-one collision? MOST of the time. The runner hits the defender, nearly every time, forcibly with the crown of the helmet vs the helmet of the defender. They are supposedly worried about injuries but if they aren't calling it against the offense, seems like bs to me.

Official : NIU to the Mountain West

Brett McMurphy posted this was last move by MWC.

I'm not sure he's right. He's typically really good with info, but I really do have a feeling NDSU is still in play. If any FCS school is ready for the jump it's NDSU.
Oh ok yeah that would be surprising but in this environment nothing is surprising any more.

Official : NIU to the Mountain West

Are you surmising that or did that come out somewhere? Just curious because it seems weird to have one team in Illinois with Texas their closest rival.

Brett McMurphy posted this was last move by MWC.

I'm not sure he's right. He's typically really good with info, but I really do have a feeling NDSU is still in play. If any FCS school is ready for the jump it's NDSU.

Whaley status

Rob Whaley Jr. might not take the court for the UNLV basketball team again this season, coach Kevin Kruger said Friday.

Whaley’s explosive style of play made him a fan favorite last season, as he started nearly half of the Rebels’ games and averaged 7.6 points and 3.6 rebounds.

But the senior forward played limited minutes off the bench during the first two games of this season and has been out since then with a lower back injury.

flipptag.js

Kruger has been vague about Whaley’s status and seemed set to continue that trend Friday, saying that a return was “TBD.”

When directed a follow-up question about whether utilizing a medical redshirt season had been discussed, the coach said yes, adding that there’s still time to decide.

“That’s always in the discussion,” he said. “… I think he’s still somebody that would love to get out there with the guys and play and help. But if you had a gun to my head right now, we’d probably be leaning in that direction.”

Listed at 6 feet, 7 inches, and 260 pounds, Whaley would likely need time to get in game shape after recovering.

He was seen participating in some shooting and movement activities earlier this season but has only sat on the sidelines in the practices that media members have been able to attend the past two weeks.

Kruger cited Whaley being “off his feet that long” and “not in the basketball flow of things” as two reasons he’s begun to brace for the reality that Whaley might not see the court again this season.

He didn’t travel with the team to Air Force this week because air travel previously agitated the injury, Kruger said.

“We just figured it would better to for him to stay back, get some rest and be around the rehab,” he said. “So the next time he has a doctor’s appointment, hopefully we’ll get some better news.”

Whaley will be granted a medical redshirt excluding this season from his standard four years of eligibility if he doesn’t participate in more than 30 percent of UNLV’s games and doesn’t appear after the midway point of the season.

With the Rebels entering their 14th contest in a 31-game regular-season slate against San Jose State on Saturday, Whaley’s window to decide might not be as wide as Kruger implied.

Whaley joined UNLV ranked as a top-10 junior college prospect nationally from the College of Southern Idaho.

An NCAA ruling recently granted an extra year of eligibility for former junior college football players and could soon be expanded to all sports, which “opens another chapter of options” for Whaley, Kruger said.

“We’re still going to prepare as nothing’s really changed,” he added. “Hopefully it’s a situation that changes for the better for us here soon. But if not, he’s still going to be big cheerleader and root on the guys.”

Contact Callie Fin at cfin@reviewjournal.com. Follow @CallieJLaw on X.

More Rebels: Follow at reviewjournal.com/Rebels.

Should we do the same??

I took one example, but you can also take the military. While nothing can stop injuries due to war, now the vast majority of retired military file lawsuits against the military to cover disabilities do to their service time, and regulations outside of combat have become much more stringent. My son served in the Army National guard and spent a year in combat overseas. He now receives a 20% disability for the rest of his life for back issues.
I’m sorry to hear about his back issues. Those aren’t something to mess with.

Thankful for his service.

Should we do the same??

I’m not gonna say it wasn’t targeting. I think targeting should be intentional and not just a bang bang play that happens. I think the defender was doing everything the game has taught him to do. Luck of his timing and height shouldn’t come into play. It was not “bad luck” to not get that call, but it would have been bad luck to get that call against you when I don’t believe the defender was doing anything wrong.

By rule maybe it was, but I don’t think it should be.
I have said all season no way that call should be targeting but by rule and how they have called it all season it absolutely was. We had a similar one go against us. But it should only be if intentional not if a player drops after the defender leaves his feet.

Ducks

Not to burst your bubble but Texas defense prior to that game was ranked higher than the Penn St. defense. Having blocking isnt an excuse because that Boise team was set up just to block for Jeanty. I think what the game showed is he has telent to be an NFL runner, but hes not a 3 down back and unless you feed him 30 carries a game, he's not getting you meaningful yardage. I mean, we kind of knew that watching Boise all season, they had to feed him the ball to maintain his averages. Yes he broke a ton of huge runs, but against better teams especially late in the year, those runs were less and less.
Actually PSU allowed 10 fewer YPG for the season and Texas had fallen off the last 4 games allowing 27 yards more He was only the second back to get 100 vs PSU.

Guess we will see but every projection I see has him in the first round.

Should we do the same??

I like how you only addressed one of the occupations.

That being said, the football I liked is a thing of the past. It’s why I don’t watch it much anymore. UNLV and Steelers for me. I don’t even watch the Super Bowl or these CFP games.

It’s now a different game. Things change. I don’t have to like it but I’ve accepted it.
I took one example, but you can also take the military. While nothing can stop injuries due to war, now the vast majority of retired military file lawsuits against the military to cover disabilities do to their service time, and regulations outside of combat have become much more stringent. My son served in the Army National guard and spent a year in combat overseas. He now receives a 20% disability for the rest of his life for back issues.
  • Like
Reactions: bcvegaspt2
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT