Dayton Daily News

Possible transfer rule change alarms Grant

- By David Jablonski Staff Writer

The Dayton Flyers would DAYTON — not have made the NCAA Tournament four years in a row without transfers.

Vee Sanford left Georgetown after two seasons for Dayton. Jordan Sibert played two seasons at Ohio State and then two at Dayton. Charles Cooke became a star at Dayton after two sea- sons at James Madison. Josh Cunning

ham left Bradley after his freshman season, debuted for the Flyers last season and has turned into one of the best players in the Atlantic 10 this season.

However, changes could be coming to the transfer rule that concern Dayton coach Anthony Grant. The NCAA Division I Council met last week in Indianapol­is and discussed allowing athletes to transfer once as undergrad- uates and be eligible to play immediatel­y. Athletes would have to reach certain academic benchmarks to qualify.

“I think I speak for every coach in the country to say that would be a disaster if that were to happen,” the Dayton coach said Monday on the “Anthony Grant Show” on WHIO Radio. “I just don’t think it makes any sense for our

game. I don’t think it sends the right message to our youth in terms of what this process is all about.”

Under curr e nt rules, undergradu­ates have to sit out a year after transferri­ng, and only graduate transfers can play right away. If the NCAA votes on changing the rules, it would likely do so in June.

Dayton saw two players transfer after its Elite Eight run in 2014. Khari Price left for Southern Mississipp­i. Alex Gavrilovic transferre­d to Towson. John Crosby decided to transfer last spring but changed his mind. Sam Miller transferre­d to the College of Charleston earlier this month, though he had lost his scholarshi­p at Dayton.

Grant knows players who face adversity as freshmen because of lack of playing time or experience home sickness would be more likely to transfer if they don’t have to sit out a season. He knows what that feeling is like because he experience­d it in the 198384 season at Dayton. He saw limited action in 18 games.

“I came to Dayton as a 17-year-old, and I had to grow up,” Grant said. “I had to go through some things being away from home and not playing early in my career. I feel very confident in say- ing if I had not been forced to by my parents and been made to grow up, I don’t know if I’d be sitting here with the opportunit­ies and experience­s I’ve had over the course of my lifetime. We’ll see. Obviously, the NCAA has pressure on them in a lot of different areas to look out for student welfare.”

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? Flyers coach Anthony Grant is concerned about a proposed change that would allow athletes to transfer once as undergradu­ates and be eligible to play immediatel­y. “I just don’t think it makes any sense for our game,” he said.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF Flyers coach Anthony Grant is concerned about a proposed change that would allow athletes to transfer once as undergradu­ates and be eligible to play immediatel­y. “I just don’t think it makes any sense for our game,” he said.

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