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Post by Danny Busch on May 22, 2015 20:01:08 GMT -6
How did we not have a thread for them?
Now that we do.......Kafentzis took his ball and went home already. Why did he even bother coming? He could have gone anywhere else and there would have been no hard feelings as GA left. Now he probably loses a year of eligibility and people will question his mental toughness and attitude.
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Post by November KS on May 22, 2015 20:27:53 GMT -6
Not to mention that he was apparently 5th string.
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Post by Danny Busch on May 22, 2015 20:31:30 GMT -6
I heard the spring report and they basically said he sucked without saying it outright.
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Post by November KS on May 22, 2015 20:33:46 GMT -6
Remember when his dad was on pimping the shit out of him on the Big Show?
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Post by November KS on May 30, 2015 11:08:13 GMT -6
May 27, 2015
MADISON, Wis. -- The Wisconsin football team's multiyear Academic Progress Rate of 998 is the top mark of all FBS teams in the country according to the NCAA's release on Wednesday. The Badgers lead a top five that includes Northwestern (992), Duke (992), Michigan (990) and Stanford (987).
This marks the third-straight year the Badgers' football team has earned an APR Public Recognition Award, given to programs that finish among the top 10 percent in their sport. UW joins Boise State, Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Northwestern, Rutgers and Stanford as the only football programs that can make that claim.
The women's golf program, which achieved a perfect score of 1000 in its multiyear APR, also earned an APR Public Recognition Award, the fifth-straight year it has done so. In all, 10 of UW's 23 sports had an APR of at least 990. Also, 19 Badgers programs were at or above their respective sport averages when compared to teams nationwide.
Wisconsin was one of just four FBS schools to achieve at least a 985 APR in football and men's basketball, joining Duke, Stanford and Michigan. Adding men's hockey to the mix, UW is the only FBS school (and joins FCS schools Dartmouth and Holy Cross) with at least a 985 APR in those three sports.
Eight programs earned a perfect single-year APR score of 1000, including men's basketball, football, men's golf, men's tennis, women's golf, women's hockey, softball and volleyball.
Implemented in 2003 as part of an ambitious academic reform effort in Division I, the Academic Progress Rate (APR) holds institutions accountable for the academic progress of their student-athletes through a team-based metric that accounts for the eligibility and retention of each student-athlete for each academic term.
The APR is calculated as follows: Each student-athlete receiving athletically related financial aid earns one point for staying in school and one point for being academically eligible. A team's total points are divided by points possible and then multiplied by 1,000 to equal the team's Academic Progress Rate.
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