The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Transfers

- BRANT SANDERLIN /BSANDERLIN@AJC.COM SPECIAL HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM

Georgia State face a less difficult path to admission than those who are applying straight from high school.

“Once a kid has gone to college, and shows he can go to college, it’s easier to get him in because he’s done well,” men’s basketball coach Ron Hunter said. “In high school you have to use all these prediction­s about what a student-athlete can be, but you don’t know.”

To transfer to Georgia State, students must have a minimum 2.5 GPA in college-level (non-remedial) courses from an accredited institutio­n and be in good standing at that institutio­n. That GPA must come from 30 transferab­le semester hours or 45 quarter hours of college-level academic coursework. Anything less than those hours, and the standards for incoming freshmen are used.

By comparison, the average GPA range for freshmen is 3.2-3.7, with SATs between 970-1190 or ACTs between 21-27, according to the university’s website. Many more requiremen­ts must be met. While necessary to maintain the academic reputation of the university, those ranges can limit the pool of recruits from which Hunter, football coach Trent Miles and other coaches at Georgia State can draw.

An easier admissions standard is in part why Miles recently added 14 transfers to his football team, which has one win in the past two seasons and needs “immediate help, impact help and balance (between classes),” he said. The 14 transfers were the most of all schools in the Sun Belt. The number was affected in part by the dissolutio­n of UAB’s football team. Five former Blazers were Quarterbac­k Nick Arbuckle set all kinds of records in his first season at Georgia State after transferri­ng from Pierce College in California. among the 14 transfers.

“The word isn’t easier,” Miles said. “It’s a smoother transition for them.”

What Miles, Hunter and others are doing isn’t skirting the university’s rules. That is why Athletic Director Charlie Cobb said he has no issues with how Miles and Hunter are using transfer students.

“The university is wellequipp­ed to help (transfer) students succeed academical­ly,” he said.

Neither Miles nor Hunter are the first coaches at Georgia State to use transfers.

Football coach Bill Curry, Miles’ predecesso­r, relied on them for a few years with mixed success. Rod Barnes, Hunter’s predecesso­r, brought in several with not much success, which led to the hiring of Hunter.

Hunter, who also used transfers at his previous job at IUPUI, said the key is to know who to take. Some transfers have bad habits on and off the court and aren’t worth the trouble. Others come humbled after not experienci­ng the success they expected. Those are the players Hunter likes because they want to prove something.

Manny Atkins was the first he persuaded to come to Georgia State. At- Georgia State forward Curtis Washington, hanging onto the basket after dunking against Troy, transferre­d to the Atlanta school from USC. kins had a decent career at Virginia Tech but decided that he wanted to return home to Atlanta to get more playing time. He became an all-conference performer, helped Georgia State win the Sun Belt last season and is with Grand Rapids in the NBA Developmen­t League. Later came Curtis Wash- ington from USC and Ryan Harrow from Kentucky, among others.

Two more — Jeremy Hollowell from Indiana and Isaiah Williams from Samford — are sitting out this season. Harrow and Williams are Atlanta natives.

“It’s one thing to have transfers, but if they don’t have success it doesn’t work,” Hunter said. “It had to work for Manny, or none of this works.” But they don’t all work. For every Nick Arbuckle, who came to Georgia State after two seasons at a junior college in California and set several school records as a quarterbac­k last season, there is a Star Jackson, also a quarterbac­k, who left Alabama in 2010 to join Georgia State. Jackson rarely played, struggled in the program and left after one season.

Even if the admission standards were easier for freshmen to meet, neither Hunter nor Miles said they plan to stop using players from community colleges or transfers from other universiti­es. Both said it’s unrealisti­c to think that they can compete with schools in the SEC or the ACC for the best high school recruits.

“We aren’t going to sign 25 high school players and all 25 be top-tier guys,” Miles said. “It doesn’t work that way at a mid-major.”

But, if they are patient, they can wait to see if some of those players they missed the first time aren’t happy with their situations and want to return home for an education and possibly more playing time. As long as the athletes have shown they can handle a college workload enough to meet Georgia State’s requiremen­t, chances are they will be admitted.

The tactic seems to be working.

“I love being home,” Ware said.

 ?? DAVID TULIS / ?? Forward Manny Atkins, an allconfere­nce player who helped lead Georgia State to last season’s Sun Belt title, is a major example of transfers having new success at a second school, after coming from Virginia Tech.
DAVID TULIS / Forward Manny Atkins, an allconfere­nce player who helped lead Georgia State to last season’s Sun Belt title, is a major example of transfers having new success at a second school, after coming from Virginia Tech.

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