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St. John’s Freshman Marcus LoVett Receives Partial Qualifier Status From NCAA

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St. John’s Freshman Marcus LoVett Receives Partial Qualifier Status From NCAA

Point Guard From Fort Wayne, Ind. Must Complete Year of Residence Before Competing for Red Storm


QUEENS, N.Y. (Nov. 11, 2015) – St. John’s freshman guard Marcus LoVett (Fort Wayne, Ind./Morgan Park) has received partial qualifier status from the NCAA. The University was notified by the NCAA of its final decision after exhausting the appeals process. LoVett will remain enrolled at St. John’s, but must complete a year of residence at the University before participating in game competition. He is permitted to practice with the team as he works toward meeting NCAA continuing eligibility requirements.

“The University disagrees with the NCAA’s decision and the process it used in reviewing Marcus’ initial eligibility waiver request,” said St. John’s interim athletic director and general counsel Joseph Oliva, Esq. “We have engaged in several conversations with the NCAA to express our concerns that their process may have violated Marcus’ legal rights. Unfortunately, it appears that the NCAA elected to disregard these concerns. We have advised Marcus and his family to consult with appropriate legal counsel about the options that may be available to challenge the NCAA ruling and the standards it applied in this process.”

“Marcus and his family have been patient throughout this lengthy process,” said St. John’s Head Coach Chris Mullin. “Marcus deserves to play and has done everything asked of him. Our staff is here to encourage Marcus as he continues to work hard on and off the court to be prepared to compete next season.”

LoVett is a four-star, consensus top-25 point guard who attended Morgan Park High School in Chicago. The 6-foot southpaw was a First Team All-State selection by the Chicago Tribune. He finished fourth in the statewide vote for Mr. Basketball in 2015 after averaging roughly 25 points, eight rebounds and seven assists per game. LoVett led his team to a third place finish at the state tournament in 2015 and set an Illinois Class 3A playoff record posting 45 points on 20-of-27 shooting in the semifinals.

Prior to Morgan Park, he lettered two seasons at Providence High School in Burbank, Calif., where he averaged over 30 points per game. LoVett spent his junior season at San Gabriel Academy in San Gabriel, Calif. He received the 2014 Wooden High School Player of the Year Award for CIFSS Division V averaging approximately 22 points and six assists.
 
All of these players, including the ones who've had to sit at Seton Hall, SHOULD sit when it's obvious they need to focus on their academics, at least to start.

This kid got his break by getting a chance at a free colllege education he'd never otherwise get. Mullin should know that if the kid is "deserving" of anything, it would be this. The basketball can come later.
 
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St. John’s threatens lawsuit after Marcus LoVett ruled ineligible
By Zach Braziller

lovettqual.jpg

Marcus LoVett poses during St. John's media day. Photo: Dennis A. Clark


Chris Mullin’s job just got a a lot harder.

Prized St. John’s freshman recruit Marcus LoVett Jr. has been ruled a partial qualifier by the NCAA, the school announced, creating a mammoth hole at the point guard position. He is allowed to practice, but cannot play in games this season as a result of the ruling.

St. John’s exhausted the appeals process, so the next step would be to get lawyers involved.

“The University disagrees with the NCAA’s decision and the process it used in reviewing Marcus’ initial eligibility waiver request,” said Joseph Oliva, St. John’s interim athletic director and general counsel, in a statement. “We have engaged in several conversations with the NCAA to express our concerns that their process may have violated Marcus’ legal rights. Unfortunately, it appears that the NCAA elected to disregard these concerns.

“We have advised Marcus and his family to consult with appropriate legal counsel about the options that may be available to challenge the NCAA ruling and the standards it applied in this process.”

The highly recruited LoVett, a top 50 prospect, attended three high schools, two in California and one in Chicago. The Chicago school was at the forefront of the NCAA’s investigation into his transcript, sources said.

LoVett took night classes during his senior season at Morgan Park in Chicago in an effort to gather sufficient credits. St. John’s was confident he had done enough to qualify, one source telling The Post, “It should be an open-and-shut case.”

Even before the ruling, Mullin took a shot at the NCAA, saying it was “absurd” a decision had yet to be made and LoVett had done “everything” needed to fully qualify.

However, the NCAA didn’t see the same thing.

Without LoVett, Italian guard Federico Mussini will have to run the point, and he struggled at the position in two exhibition games, committing 11 turnovers and notching just four assists.
 
Zach Braziller ‏@NYPost_Brazille 16h16 hours ago Queens, NY

Marcus LoVett took night classes this past year to qualify. Put in a ton of time to get through. They won't take this sitting down. #sjubb

OH PLEASE. the kid went to 3 high schools & obviously ****ed up big time along the way. It's REALLY not that hard to qualify to play in college. The NCAA took way too long to come to a decision, but clearly the kid's grades were a hot mess across three schools and night classes. It was def. murky, and there seems to be a hint of shadiness with the Chicago HS grades...a la cheating in some way. Zero sympathy.
 
OH PLEASE. the kid went to 3 high schools & obviously ****ed up big time along the way. It's REALLY not that hard to qualify to play in college. The NCAA took way too long to come to a decision, but clearly the kid's grades were a hot mess across three schools and night classes. It was def. murky, and there seems to be a hint of shadiness with the Chicago HS grades...a la cheating in some way. Zero sympathy.
One thing is for sure, Brazziler has entrenched himself firmly in mullin's corner, and the same couldn't be true of what he tweeted/posted about Lavin.
 
Mullin seems to be following the Bobby Gonzalez school of tangling with the NCAA. He should be happy the kid gets to play next year.
 
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Brazziler has an edge to him. Get on his wrong side and he'll roast you.

Now he's cozzing up to Mullin to get SJU access. Playing all the angles.
 
Very transparent. He knew Lavin was on his way out, and really dealt some body blows that I'm not sure some of our reporters would levy against SHU guys.
 
Braziller supports our NYC guys too. I have no idea if SJU has a case, and I agree it should be easy to qualify to play. But the NCAA is such a bogus organization; I am glad to see pushback.
 
If Mullin thought having this kid attend post-graduation night classes at the 11th hour would actually work, he shouldn't be academically eligible either.
 
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