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Post by bringbackcaro on Apr 26, 2018 18:13:40 GMT -5
Kenyi's grades at Harvard for 3? 4? semesters were good enough that he could transfer to Georgetown He lasted at most a year at Georgetown before transferring to a no name school in WV. Kenyi did not transfer to Georgetown for basketball,and I don't believe he even enrolled as a student. The story was he took a year off from Harvard, then changed his mind on going back and enrolled at Seton Hill (not Seton Hall), an NAIA school in Greensburg, PA. He averaged 12.3 ppg. in two seasons. basketball.realgm.com/player/Max-Kenyi/Summary/12552If I remember correctly, I don't think the "year off" was by his choice..
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Post by bison137 on Apr 26, 2018 19:12:44 GMT -5
There is definitely a similar rule. I just am not sure the range is one standard deviation. It definitely used to be somewhat larger than that. No idea if it has changed, but I've never seen anything to indicate it had. Btw, one of those who studied it and said the range was larger than one standard deviation was Eric. There could indeed be some flexibility with the one standard deviation rule. DFWHoya, IIRC, made the observation that if GU were to leave PL football, GU could recruit football players that it can't recruit because of the PL AI. GU's school-wide AI probably approaches the lowest of the Ivies (Cornell?) and if the football team average AI had to be within one standard deviation of the GU schoolwide AI, one standard deviation at GU would be higher than the schoolwide AI for the other PL football schools, except perhaps Colgate. I could readily see GU having gotten relief. Columbia football was given relief under the AI by the rest of the IL. The relief was given for two or three years to help make Columbia more competitive. It didn't help. I don't think it's a question of anyone getting relief in the PL. Schools like Colgate, Bucknell, and Holy Cross all had AI's whose range was more than one standard deviation.
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Post by bison137 on Apr 26, 2018 19:14:00 GMT -5
I'm not sure if Max Kenyi would have been accepted at HC. We'll never know, but he would have fit comfortably within the Holy Cross academic index.
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