Kolek planning to go pro
Lived in CT, I enjoyed the quiet... and at the end of the hall allowed quiet drinking w/o RA interruption. Wouldn't be so bad for players it's a short walk to Johnston hall.
Thanks. It was East Hall when I was there. I seem to remember it was pretty outdated and I thought the school was selling it. Did they renovate?
There were major renovations in the early 2000s. It was the nicest dorm on campus when I was there.
We just won't tell them that you ever lived there. Problem solved.
When we did tours through East/Straz, the single rooms were the main attraction. The location with a downstairs gym and barber shop were pluses.Negatives: distance from most of the campus; cross the bridge; closer to downtown and transients; cafeteria food and social life.
No...and after reading many many psosts from people on this board that do...I have to say I'm MUCH better off, if this is the type of "intelligence" a degree from MU gets you. It sure is on full display I will say that.
It was no fun slogging across that bridge after a snow storm.
Lived in East Hall (now Straz) my sophomore year. That was right after the 2nd round of renovations. They renovated half of it each year for two years. My frosh year, their were numerous sprinkler malfunctions (the regular kind not ZFB's sprinkler malfunctions) but that was all ironed out by the time I lived their. Lived in a very roomy triple.
I am confident that this issue will be resolved by next year.
At least in this article, doesn't sound like Duke basketball players are living in the lap of luxury. http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2013/02/05/duke-basketballs-rodney-hood-finds-frustration-transfer-travel-restrictions
Restrictions on internet? Probably not.How many kids these days watch TV? They don't watch it just to watch TV anymore; it's really become "white noise" while they search the net, text friends, watch videos, etc.
I would expect they like to watch a live sporting event or two, which are mostly on tv. Looks like they are living in the dorms at Duke as Freshmen and Sophomores. I may be wrong. I believe at Notre Dame there are no athletic dorms, freshmen and sophomores live amongst their peers. http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ncaaf--at-notre-dame--campus-life-differs-little-for-student-and-football-star-151519405.htmlStanford...same thing. http://tusb.stanford.edu/2010/12/our-athletes-are-better-than-yours.htmlUCLA...same thing....they don't even charter and have to get into Southwest Airlines planes like the rest of the cattle. http://blog.admissions.ucla.edu/2012/03/07/ucla-student-athletes/I'd be curious to see if the policy is changed at MU, as certainly some of the best athletic programs in the country can perform at high levels while integrating students athletes with their peers and still enjoy success.
TAMUI do know, Newsie is right on you knowing ball.
Having seen the dorms at all of the universities you have listed except for Stanford, I can safely tell you that the "dorms" at these schools are nicer than the Humphery apartments.
Understood, but where I'm coming from is that those schools don't have specialized athletic dorms (technically no one does since 51% of a dorm must be general students) that are taj mahals vs the normal dorm other students stay in. To me, that's part of the problem when you are putting certain people on a pedestal...sure, many will argue you have to do that to recruit, etc. My point is that many successful programs prove out that you don't need to do that and it might benefit the student athlete better in the long run having them actually live amongst non student athletes. Just an opinion.
I have nothing against athletes living in the general population - I even like the idea philosophically. But athletes in the revenue producing sports ARE more valuable than the normal student. Great that UCLA, Duke and Stanford have fantastic dormitory facilities for all students. Wish MU did too. We don't. Having our athletes live in crummy dorms because other students do is silly and will hurt our efforts to compete.
So because basketball players at UCLA stay in nice dorms, Marquette players should stay in dumpy ones? Or are you saying Marquette needs a major dorm overhaul? I'd favor the dorm upgrades that benefit everyone. Then the value of living among the general student population is a positive and not a negative.
Has it hurt? I know that was Buzz's argument, but based on the last two recruiting classes....from a rankings perspective it doesn't seem to.If we land a top 5 class this year, does that mean we should expect top 3 if we change the policies?
Let's get real Chicos. All things are not equal in recruiting. Trying to recruit to Milwaukee, WI aint the same as trying to recruit to Westwood and Palo Alto, CA. Notre Dame? While, it has the mystique.Now, Stillwater, Oklahoma? Hmm. Not a lot to sell geographically there, so what does Boone Pickens do? Builds amazing facilities and residences for the athletes.There is simply zero reason to make recruiting anymore difficult and challenging than it already is.Where are basketball players at IU housed?
Not saying they are equal, but again I'm pointing to the results. If we land Ellenson and get a top 5 class with the current policy, what does changing the policy do? Top 3? Seems to me the current policy didn't hurt us from landing a very good class two years ago, what would have been a good class this last year if not for Buzz leaving and kids opting out, and Wojo landing a very good class. Have we ever thought that some kids and their families WANT their kids to enjoy the college experience with their peers? That's one of the big selling points at some of the schools I mentioned. I could go on with Vanderbilt and many others.I do not know where student athletes are housed at IU today. Back when I was there, as freshmen and sophomores they lived in the dorms like everyone else. I don't know if they had roommates, or whatever, but the kid next door could be an Engineering student from DeKalb or a biology student from Stockholm, whatever. That may not be the case anymore. When I was at KU, football and basketball players lived in on campus apartments. Calvin Rayford, Dana Stubblefield and Gilbert Brown all lived in the same apartment building I did....it was not that great. Having said that, KU is building an athletics dorm now for basketball, men's and women's.I totally get it, I'm just curious what the pay off is since many schools do just fine with this philosophy and MU hasn't been hurt by it if one looks at the results of late. There are some significant societal benefits to taking that approach. Plenty of benefits for building nice digs, as well, but also some downside that should be factored in. In my opinion.