joshvanklomp
Well-known member
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Slow Hand said:Generally speaking I think you need to enter the season with the idea that you will red shirt him. It is somewhat of a gamble because you hope that Cam can make it through the year without missing substantial amounts of time. If he were to get hurt early in the year then yes I believe you should take the red shirt off of Josh and finish the year out strong. It is a balancing act between the two of them. I wouldn't want to see a half of year or even a full year wasted as a back up if in fact he is the franchise type of QB many people are predicting him to be. Young or Smith would be able to cover a few reps or even a game or two if Cam was not able to play. Just my 2cents however.
PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:Generally speaking I think you need to enter the season with the idea that you will red shirt him. It is somewhat of a gamble because you hope that Cam can make it through the year without missing substantial amounts of time. If he were to get hurt early in the year then yes I believe you should take the red shirt off of Josh and finish the year out strong. It is a balancing act between the two of them. I wouldn't want to see a half of year or even a full year wasted as a back up if in fact he is the franchise type of QB many people are predicting him to be. Young or Smith would be able to cover a few reps or even a game or two if Cam was not able to play. Just my 2cents however.
I think you have to think of the other players on the team. Say Cam got through a half or even a little over a half of a season and gets hurt, and then you flush the rest of the season away just to keep a redshirt on Allen? I think that is totally unfair to players like Eddie Yarbrough that deserve to go out on a winning team if at all possible, to always be "building for the future" is fine if you are talking about Spring Ball, etc., but during the season you are out there to win each and every game, the rest of the team deserves it. I think it is wise to just go into the season planning on playing Josh Allen at some time, he would have another 2 full years and if he did get hurt himself he would still have the redshirt left. Aaron Young was totally overmatched on Saturday. He was unable to pass or throw with any type of effectiveness, and it has been the same throughout the whole Spring practice. Nick Smith at least was able to use his legs to get some positive yardage even though he was ineffective as a passer. To put either of these you men out there imo would be nothing more than resigning yourself to "next year". I truly feel that you need to think of the whole team and the effort and work that everyone has put in and what is on the line for them, if that means blowing a redshirt, so be it. The best scenario for everyone is that Wyoming wins all of their games with Cam at the helm and he never gets hurt....but you know how likely that scenario is!!!!
Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
WestWYOPoke said:Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
This is mostly accurate. A "medical redshirt" or technically a medical hardship waiver, can be granted by the NCAA if the athlete meets the appropriate criteria and has sufficient documentation. Generally, these are used in place of a normal redshirt in situations where the athlete plays and was injured very early in the season. There are very rare occasions where they are used on someone who has already used a normal redshirt in their career, are injured, and are granted a 6th year to compete. The most they could ever attempt to use a medical hardship is twice; and odds are the NCAA would turn them down the second time.
WestWYOPoke said:Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
This is mostly accurate. A "medical redshirt" or technically a medical hardship waiver, can be granted by the NCAA if the athlete meets the appropriate criteria and has sufficient documentation. Generally, these are used in place of a normal redshirt in situations where the athlete plays and was injured very early in the season. There are very rare occasions where they are used on someone who has already used a normal redshirt in their career, are injured, and are granted a 6th year to compete. The most they could ever attempt to use a medical hardship is twice; and odds are the NCAA would turn them down the second time.
Slow Hand said:WestWYOPoke said:Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
This is mostly accurate. A "medical redshirt" or technically a medical hardship waiver, can be granted by the NCAA if the athlete meets the appropriate criteria and has sufficient documentation. Generally, these are used in place of a normal redshirt in situations where the athlete plays and was injured very early in the season. There are very rare occasions where they are used on someone who has already used a normal redshirt in their career, are injured, and are granted a 6th year to compete. The most they could ever attempt to use a medical hardship is twice; and odds are the NCAA would turn them down the second time.
Another point worth noting is that an athlete never knows if they will receive a Medical Hardship until after the fact (the season). So it is somewhat of a gamble.
Slow Hand said:WestWYOPoke said:Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
This is mostly accurate. A "medical redshirt" or technically a medical hardship waiver, can be granted by the NCAA if the athlete meets the appropriate criteria and has sufficient documentation. Generally, these are used in place of a normal redshirt in situations where the athlete plays and was injured very early in the season. There are very rare occasions where they are used on someone who has already used a normal redshirt in their career, are injured, and are granted a 6th year to compete. The most they could ever attempt to use a medical hardship is twice; and odds are the NCAA would turn them down the second time.
Another point worth noting is that an athlete never knows if they will receive a Medical Hardship until after the fact (the season). So it is somewhat of a gamble.
PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:WestWYOPoke said:Slow Hand said:PotatoCreekPete said:Slow Hand said:One point I might add though, is a medical red shirt has nothing to do with a regular red shirt. A player can have multiple medical red shirt years if they meet the criteria set forth by the NCAA in addition to a "athletic red shirt."
This is mostly accurate. A "medical redshirt" or technically a medical hardship waiver, can be granted by the NCAA if the athlete meets the appropriate criteria and has sufficient documentation. Generally, these are used in place of a normal redshirt in situations where the athlete plays and was injured very early in the season. There are very rare occasions where they are used on someone who has already used a normal redshirt in their career, are injured, and are granted a 6th year to compete. The most they could ever attempt to use a medical hardship is twice; and odds are the NCAA would turn them down the second time.
Another point worth noting is that an athlete never knows if they will receive a Medical Hardship until after the fact (the season). So it is somewhat of a gamble.
I am not mixing a redshirt and a medical hardship. What I am talking about is, say that he plays next year and doesn't use his redshirt, and then he plays as a junior and gets hurt, he would still have that redshirt in his back pocket so he doesn't lose a year. If he did use his redshirt next year and then gets hurt in another year, the medical redshirt would be his only recourse and I would prefer not to rely upon the medical hardship to get a year unless you have to. A medical hardship is a different program from what I am talking about. I am aware that you can't have played too much and it would have to be a serious enough injury that it took your season away, etc., etc. and in the end even though there are some guidelines it does sometimes come down to an arbitrary decision by the NCAA.
Think about this scenario. What happens if Cam is the starter of course, but that you use Josh on a regular basis to come in and play? How valuable would that actual game experience be for Josh if you are not jeopardizing the winning of the game in getting Josh ready in case Cam does get hurt and how much would it help Josh to prepare for the following year? I am not one that believes that you have to ride one horse the whole way, that is why you have a stable of QB's.