Old School
Jolly Good Fellow
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- 136
GOAT. Watching him at Tech was amazing!
Screw that, he's no doubt 1st ballot to me. He ranks up among the greats statistically (not he highest but he's on the leader boards) but was the single best player in the league for at least 6 of his 9 years while playing for a dumpster fire of a franchise. He is still the best WR I've ever seen, and I grew up watching Rice in his prime!I didn't realize how many people would be making the argument that he isn't HoF. I get his career numbers don't come close, but when you're the best WR in the generation of passing attacks, you have to be in there. Maybe not first ballot but definitely HoF.
Surely he will be visible to recruits and at special functions. As for coaching, I don't know. It is always problematic when a superstar is hired to coach or manage. Them what can do so easily often can't teach a lick. And Johnson made impossible catches look fairly routine.Hope he finishes school and we offer him a coaching job. That should sway some recruits to have megaton as your positions coach!
Beckham Junior says hello.I didn't realize how many people would be making the argument that he isn't HoF. I get his career numbers don't come close, but when you're the best WR in the generation of passing attacks, you have to be in there. Maybe not first ballot but definitely HoF.
Any current students looking to fill out their flag football roster?
I was vaguely irritated with his reference to going back to GT for his degree, that since he has been out so long -- pro football will do that to you -- he might have to go through the admission process again. That would be a world class, hall of fame ignorant decision by somebody in administration. Mind boggling. You have a walking advertisement for your school and its education, who publicly states its importance and value, who has millions of dollars -- presumably, though he never seemed the type to ride with a posse spending his money, and if so his mommy and daddy would have slapped him silly -- and he is to be reduced to beginner status because by god we have our rules. Meanwhile, the millions of dollars from which he could contribute to various Tech activities maybe sits there. If they do that I would hate to see any more posts on Tech's academic acumen. (Even Gailey was smart enough to throw that fade to him against Clemson.)
Hahaha...nope. Put Odell (in his prime) on one side of the field and Megatron (in his prime) on the other and who gets more defensive attention? Calvin changed the way defenses played against a WR (you ever see anyone else get routinely triple teamed, and still produce top notch stats?)...it's not his fault he played for a franchise that only knows how to lose.Beckham Junior says hello.
Hahaha...nope. Put Odell (in his prime) on one side of the field and Megatron (in his prime) on the other and who gets more defensive attention? Calvin changed the way defenses played against a WR (you ever see anyone else get routinely triple teamed, and still produce top notch stats?)...it's not his fault he played for a franchise that only knows how to lose.
Unless the rules have drastically changed, this won't happen.I was vaguely irritated with his reference to going back to GT for his degree, that since he has been out so long -- pro football will do that to you -- he might have to go through the admission process again. That would be a world class, hall of fame ignorant decision by somebody in administration. Mind boggling. You have a walking advertisement for your school and its education, who publicly states its importance and value, who has millions of dollars -- presumably, though he never seemed the type to ride with a posse spending his money, and if so his mommy and daddy would have slapped him silly -- and he is to be reduced to beginner status because by god we have our rules. Meanwhile, the millions of dollars from which he could contribute to various Tech activities maybe sits there. If they do that I would hate to see any more posts on Tech's academic acumen. (Even Gailey was smart enough to throw that fade to him against Clemson.)
I was vaguely irritated with his reference to going back to GT for his degree, that since he has been out so long -- pro football will do that to you -- he might have to go through the admission process again. That would be a world class, hall of fame ignorant decision by somebody in administration. Mind boggling. You have a walking advertisement for your school and its education, who publicly states its importance and value, who has millions of dollars -- presumably, though he never seemed the type to ride with a posse spending his money, and if so his mommy and daddy would have slapped him silly -- and he is to be reduced to beginner status because by god we have our rules. Meanwhile, the millions of dollars from which he could contribute to various Tech activities maybe sits there. If they do that I would hate to see any more posts on Tech's academic acumen. (Even Gailey was smart enough to throw that fade to him against Clemson.)
Didn't we get rid of the BC program?You are reading too much into it. Every student who leaves school for more than two consecutive semesters has to apply for readmission. (And "readmission" is nothing—I repeat, nothing—like the original admission process.) As long as the student left in good academic standing, it is basically an automatic approval—it is really just a way of officially notifying your major school (and the Institute) that you are going to be back on their active roster. I don't know of a single case where such a readmission was denied.
A separate issue might be the Ten Year Rule—coursework more than ten years old has to be approved in order to apply to your degree. Again, this is a formality. I've approved such requests pretty much every time they've crossed my desk, and it is reasonably standard for all programs at Georgia Tech to do so. The Ten Year Rule is in place to make sure that you are not getting a degree based on knowledge that has since become obsolete. Think of a lapsed EE major from the 50s getting a degree in 2016 based on his knowledge vacuum tube technology, instead of digital electronics—or a returning CS major whose expertise is programming in COBOL.
I have no doubt that Calvin would be accepted back into the BC program, and most (if not all) of his prior coursework will be accepted in a snap.
Edit: Dang it! Everyone is beating me to the point, tonight...but to @Buzz776g: no, he would almost surely not have to retake calculus; it has not changed in...oh...longer than any of us have been alive.
Well, yeah...there is that. Actually, that could really be an issue...or not. SOP for readmission cases is that the student falls under the catalog year of their readmission, not the original catalog year when they first enrolled at Tech. If Calvin comes back starting in Summer, which would be the 2016-2017 catalog year, the BC program may no longer exist. Even then, though, there would be a workaround—the admitting School has the option of allowing a readmitted student to return under a prior catalog year. My department has done this in the recent past, so I know it's a real option. The School of Architecture could choose to readmit Calvin under the catalog year when he first enrolled, sort of like a grandfather clause.Didn't we get rid of the BC program?
I have been at Tech, as non-tenured faculty, long enough to know the rules & regs pretty darn well. (I tend to have to explain them to our tenured faculty...a lot...) It also doesn't hurt to be on good speaking terms with the Registrar and a bunch of the Associate Registrars.@GTpdm -- I may have beat you, but you explained it better.