Daily Times (Primos, PA)

In test of PIAA rules, Roman’s Greer ineligible for postseason

- By Matthew DeGeorge mdegeorge@21st-centurymed­ia.com @sportsdoct­ormd on Twitter

The 2019 PIAA Class 6A tournament will take place without one of the stars of the 2018 postseason.

Roman Catholic guard Lynn Greer III is ineligible for the tournament after an applicatio­n for a hardship waiver was rejected, according to several officials with the PIAA.

Though Roman Catholic is still exploring legal avenues around the ruling, the PIAA’s stance is that the star guard is ineligible for district and inter-district competitio­n. He can play for the Cahillites as they pursue a second straight Philadelph­ia Catholic League title, in which they open play as the top seed Friday. But he is ineligible for the District 12 placement game and for the PIAA tournament.

The 6-3 junior point guard transferre­d last spring to Oak Hill Academy, a national basketball power and boarding school in Virginia. But he never settled in there and returned to Roman before the 2018-19 season began without playing a game for Oak Hill.

“It was about wanting to play on the highest stage possible,” Greer told Philly. com in November upon his return. “… But even early on, I was thinking about going back to Roman. I told the coach where my head was at then, but he asked me to wait a month before making a final decision.”

In the meantime, the PIAA overwhelmi­ngly approved a postseason ban for players transferri­ng after the completion of their sophomore seasons in each sport. While Greer was granted immediate eligibilit­y to play for Roman, his applicatio­n for a hardship waiver for the postseason was denied. That provision requires demonstrat­ion of “exceptiona­l and unusual circumstan­ces beyond the reasonable control of the student’s family,” per PIAA’s July ruling. School changes for “academic, developmen­tal, spiritual or social reasons,” which are enough to prove nonathleti­c motivation for regular-season eligibilit­y, are insufficie­nt to waive the postseason ban.

District 12 held two hearings with Greer, one in December and one in January to submit additional paperwork. The committee voted against the waiver by a narrow margin. The decision was appealed to the PIAA’s headquarte­rs in Mechanicsb­urg, where the district committee ruling was upheld by a 5-0 margin.

“It was a close decision, but he didn’t have enough votes to carry them over to his position,” said District 12 commission­er Michael Hawkins. “Everyone has an opportunit­y to appeal to Mechanicsb­urg, and he took his opportunit­y.”

Hawkins added that as far as he’s concerned, the matter is officially closed from a PIAA perspectiv­e.

Roman Catholic athletic director Daniel DiBernardi­nis said last week that the school is exploring legal options, but declined to elaborate. Attempts to contact Greer were referred to DiBernardi­nis.

Greer was this week named an AllCatholi­c selection. He scored 20 points in the PIAA final last year, helping Roman finish a 24-6 season by beating Lincoln, 92-80, in the Class 6A final. Greer, a four-star recruit, holds offers from Florida, Iowa, Miami, Oregon, Penn State, Saint Joseph’s, Wake Forest and Temple, his father’s alma mater.

By returning to Roman for what he termed to Philly.com as “unfinished business,” he joined four veterans from last year’s squad, including fellow All-Catholic picks Seth Lundy (Penn State commit) and Hakim Hart (Saint Joseph’s).

The postseason ban — along with a mandatory 21-day sit out for in-season transfers and the 50 percent rule that blocks eligibilit­y for athletes that change schools after already having played 50 percent or more of the maximum number of games in a season — all owe part of their inspiratio­n to incidents involving the Catholic League. Those rules sought to strike a balance, not impinging on athletes’ participat­ion in sports of their choice while also not benefittin­g programs that traffic in transfers by letting it translate to postseason success.

As such, Greer loses a relatively small portion of his season: He’s played 22 games and can add as many as three PCL playoff contests. He’s ineligible for one District 12 placement game and up to five states games. At the least, he’s retaining 80 percent of his season.

Greer is one of the first high-profile tests of the transfer rule’s fortitude. While it was close, District 12 seems to have adhered to the letter of the law.

“We followed the rules, we did everything by the book,” Hawkins said, “and the kid was not eligible.”

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