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s. She went on to say, "We need to raise money and we're not apologetic about it. " So, what are your thoughts? Has the Breast Cancer Awareness campaign become too "pink" and too commercialized? Or is the campaign doing everything it can to raise funds for research? Should words like boobs, lumps and bumps be filtered and banned? Aren't they exactly what breast cancer is all about? Oversigning has long been one of the most controversial topics in college football. Recently, it's become one of the most talked about, too. While the practice has been common for years, only recently have pointed questions been raised about how coaches put "oversigning" to use and why, for that matter, the practice is still allowed. "Oversigning" occurs when a coach recruits and signs more players than he's allowed to have under NCAA rules. When those coaches find themselves with more than the allowable 85 scholarship players, they have to find some way to get back under the limit and that's where the trouble starts. Back in August, LSU coach Les Miles came under fire for his handling of freshman Elliott Porter a kid who, after signing his national letter of intent in February and enrolling at school in June, was eventually told that if he wanted to remain at LSU, he'd have to take "greyshirt" year in other words, remain on the team without a scholarship . The reason? Miles didn't have a scholarship to give him. Porter, offended by Miles' request, has cheap replica soccer jerseys since transferred to Kentucky. Miles is hardly alone, of course. Houston Nutt of Ole Miss has been criticized for his use of the practice. So, too, has Alabama's Nick Saban. Even still, nothing has changed, and while the NCAA limit on scholarships remains in tact, there is no rule authentic soccer jerseys cheap specifically targeted at oversigning. It is the stated goal of Oversigning. com a new blog dedicated to the investigation of oversigning in college football to change that. The man responsible for the site recently agreed to answer some questions about oversigning, about his blog, and about what he'd like to see the NCAA do about the oversigning issue. He requested that we protect his anonymity.Click here:
http://beepdf.com/doc/152054/user/11018/