Grizbacker1
Well-known member
scottsgriz said:Grizbacker1 said:NO, it is NOT the coahes call. Any coach who would do what you mention above is an idiot, and probably not a winning coach. There are many reasons a kid may not want to redshirt. Granted, it doesn't happen very often because a redshirt is generally discussed prior to the athlete coming to a school. But to say the coach can force it upon a student is a joke
Right...The players also decide when and how much playing time they get.
I don't even really care much if Autry or anyone else redshirted or not. It is a tough call either way. I have pointed out it is a good idea to consult the player multiple times, but it is ridiculous to say it isn't the coaches call as you initially did.
The first time a player doesn't appear in a game for a season, it doesn't burn a year of competitive eligibility. The player can climb the M and decree, "I refuse to redshirt!" The player can leave after 4 years, but he would still have a year of eligibility remaining in the eyes of the NCAA.
I am curious about this situation now though. Are you purely speaking hypothetically, or are you saying Tinkle wanted Autry to redshirt and chose to grant him his wish after Autry was adamantly against it?
I am not saying anything of the sort, you are the one trying to put words in my mouth. I can tell you from talking to umpteen Head Coaches I know very wel how the redshirt process works. I will say this one last time, please try and read it before another knee jerk reaction. A good head coach will have covered the redshirt situation during the recruiting process. I know full well the Griz FB team took a kid who could have been in the PAC 10 simply because he wanted to play right away, and the PAC 10 HC didn't think the kid was ready. So, believe it or not, I couldn't care less, but kids have a big say in it. A Coach who tries to force his will is going to lose the kid. That doesn't mean the coach isn't right, but there are life situations to consider too, not just the playing part of it.