Reader comments
BYU football: USU QB Nelson transferring to BYU
187 comments | Read story
The exact same thing could be said about
Ty Detmer
All he accomplished during his career at BYU was beating the defending national champions and #1 ranked team, Miami, breaking most of the NCAA career passing records, and winning the Heisman Trophy.
I also think the NCAA should change rules to make it so that serving a religious mission (LDS or not) shouldn't be the easy-out of a scholarship commitment. The waiver for religious reasons should only apply to eligibility, not to commitment. Riley *should* be forced to sit out a year of football for transferring schools, as *should* have Ben Olson.
Yeah, we are really sad about our two latest QB's out of Arizona, and so sad about this pickup of arguably the best QB in the nation if TD's count for anything--oh yeah, they do. Duh!
However, he has been gone for a while now on his mission. MAYBE he has been tricked into going to BYU because BYU wears AGGIE BLUE!!! Those Cougars are tricky!
He was 2-1 versus the kitties AND Dave Rose didn't want to play him his senior year!!!
A flat out lie...
Bronco only started communicating with Riley after he found out that Riley was interested in transferring to BYU. Even then, Bronco had the courtesy to get the permission of Riley's mission president before contacting him.
I'm sure UCLA, like most schools, never even considered contacting Ben Olsen's mission president and I'm not even sure Utah St. or Utah would bother.
BYU athletes are constantly being recruited by other schools and BYU would be foolish if they didn't stay in touch with their missionary athletes just to let them know that they still want them coming back to the program.
But, to my knowledge, BYU does not activily recruit missionary athletes from other schools during their missions unless those athletes have expressed an interest in being contacted by BYU.
BYU followed the rules and its program now offers Nelson what he is looking for. That's it! Missionaries are encouraged to plan for their best futures after their missions, and their is no foul in that. If USU or anywhere else is a better fit for a BYU player to leave to after his mission, that will always smart a little, but BYU is running a program where we will retain players who want to play Bronco-style football. We aren't missing Ben Olsen!
LDS missionaries are fair game for ANY school to recruit after they've been away from their school for 18 months.
Please explain how this is a recruiting advantage for BYU?
Why should any school be prohibited from initiating contact with any available athlete, period?
And why should a missionary athlete be forced to sit out a year after his mission, since after 18 months he is officially released from his letter of intent and is free to sign with any team he chooses?
Why punish an athlete for serving a religious mission?
The same rules that apply to missionary service, also apply to athletes who are called away for military service.
As for ProvoCoug and some other BYU fans, your "holier than thou" attitude is the reason people do not like BYU athletics. It sounds like you need to listen more when you are at church.
I am a true Aggie fan. I will always cheer for them no matter how many games they win or lose. Go Aggies!!!
I also imagine that he WAS being written all the time by Utah State to determine what his plans were, and that this was a big distraction for him. I believe he consulted with his father and others he loved, including the mission president, and felt that this needed to be done now so he could concentrate on his mission.
I felt bad when Olsen left, and I know Aggie fans feel the same way about losing Riley, who by all accounts is a class guy and an unbelievable competitor. I understand Olsen's reasons for leaving, and I also understand Riley's reasons. We can second guess or disagree about whether it was the right thing to do, but at the end of the day, it is the athlete's decision.
Stay home, be a good guy, and play football. Just honor ALL your commitments. It's our whole society. Maybe USU was like a "starter marriage" for Riley!!!
I think this will become the new Jaycee Carrol rule BYU can't afford to have am RM excell for another school, better to have him sit on the bench.
I guess if you're looking for faults in others you'll find them, real or perceived. (Most of them are perceived.) Too many people take these rivalries too far, and start making it personal. Austin Collie says he was blessed for trying to do what's right on and off the field and Ute fan takes that personally as meaning that Utes aren't doing what is right. Please, if you need something to motivate you, look at what's happened on the field the last two years.
Finally, this decision by Nelson will take 4 or 5 years to really show if it even matters.
"Time wounds all heals"
There's no need to wonder. It's not likely a student athlete were to transfer from BYU to USU for athletic reasons, and even if he did he probably wasn't that good to begin with so it wouldn't be very newsworthy.
RE: Academic?
Nobody cares about your "academic" decision. This article is about Riley Nelson and his decision. The reason your decision wasn't put in the newspaper is because you can't toss the pig-skin around. So, again, no one cares about your decision to go to USU and Cal. Good for you! Riley Nelson sees it differently and wants to win as a football player, who can blame him?
ummm, Jim McMahon
--arguably one of the best quarterbacks, if not the best quarterback, among all of the outstanding quarterbacks that have played for BYU
--would have broken the record for breaking the most NCAA records if there had been such a record (he broke something like 47 NCAA records his junior year)
--should have won the Heisman Trophy
--did lead the Chicago Bears to a Super Bowl Championship
I'm hoping Riley Nelson will be an outstanding quarterback at BYU, but until he proves it on the field, he remains in the Ben Olsen category -- great potential, but unrealized success.
Given all of that...he is as smart as they come and his arm is better than people think. He makes good decisions and makes plays. He benefitted in the system he played in but he transcended the system. He doesn't need a cannon arm for Anai's system, but he does need smarts and he has that by the bushelful.
I'm a huge Aggie fan and I hate that he went to BYU but I don't blame him. Where football is concerned, that athletic department is as inept as they come. It's like turning the keys to the kingdom over to Homer Simpson and Peter Griffin. Were it not for Stew Morrill I'm sure the Bball program would be in similar disarray. Hacks.
A great player will get noticed wherever he plays, that is true, but why blame the kid if he can play somewhere that has real football and a chance at winning more than a couple of games?
BYU does not have a recruiting advantage when it comes to LDS missionaries. They do not seek out D-1 football players who are serving missions, and are not privy to any "special list" that these elders would supposedly be on. If they are contacted by the missionary (which in this case they were), then the coaches take a look at him and decide whether or not he is someone who would fit their program. If he is and they believe it is the right fit they contact the Mission President to make sure that their communication with the elder is ok. After receiving permission then they contact the elder, not before.
So, I understand all the bitterness that comes along with this transfer (as us Coug fans went through it with Ben Olsen), but get your facts straight before you spout off on something you know very little or nothing about.
BYU does not need Nelson. USU does. He has a much better chance of having a great career at USU and becoming a legend for generations at USU.
I am disappointed that BYU would recruit someone or even offer a scholarship to someone who had COMMITTED to USU (or anywhere) regardless of where the interest began. I thought commitment was important to Mendenhall.
I know that BYU students and alumni have a very high opinion of themselves and their school, but it is not widely shared. Most view BYU as they do Oral Roberts University. As a doctoral student at a Big Ten university, I was so grateful that I had gone to USU and not BYU. USU is much more respected. There are many of us who choose to go to other schools who could have taken your slot at BYU.
"Quarterbacks transfer," Spurrier said. "You sign three or four quarterbacks. Maybe there's a better opportunity for those players to go play somewhere else. That's what they should do."
Max Hall and Ben Olson know this. QB's change schools- that is just how it goes.
And to Aggie fans: I know how hard a blow this must be. I hope no Cougar fans try to rub it in and taunt you. We went through this with Ben Olsen and know how it feels so we can and should be empathetic. And who knows, it may be a blessing in disguise like it was with Olsen.
As far as the BYU recruiting of missionaries goes I reiterate two important points:
1) Of course BYU uses their affiliation with the LDS church to gain a recruiting advantage with LDS players. Why wouldn't they? To say that is somehow unfair or improper is just sour grapes.
2) From first hand experience, I can tell you nearly every college athelete who puts their education and athletics on hold to serve a mission is going to have contact from coaches and recruiters in some form on their mission. Depending on when the Missionary is to return home in relation to the start of their athletic season and the NCAA signing rules it is often necessary to address the issue while still serving. Usually it is not a problem.
Of course not. Why would he give the devil equal time? :)
It is quick possible (in fact probable) that this kid or his family contacted BYU and informed the program of his intention to transfer, and that BYU simply participated in the basic communication required to confirm it, etc.
There is a story in the transfer, but no story at all in the fact that there was contact (likely minimal) with the kid during his mission.
I seriously doubt you've had any contact whatsoever with anybody involved in the whole decision-making process, yet you throw out accusations as if you KNOW what really occurred.
As for USU better preparing you for your doctoral studies, your opinion of the superiority/inferiority of either school's academic excellence is baseless.
I personally know one of the world's leading scientistists in his field; a man who has published over a hundred articles in scientific journals and has several U.S. patents; a man who was recently made a Fellow at one of the top research facilities in the world; who got his bachelor's degree at BYU.
There are thousands and thousands of other examples of BYU graduates who have gone on to achieve great success in their chosen fields.
Add your comment
Comments are monitored. Any comments found to be abusive, offensive, off-topic, misrepresentative, more than 200 words or containing URLs will not be posted.
E-mail address: For internal use only. We may want to contact you to publish your comment (not your e-mail address) in the newspaper or for a separate story idea.
- Birthdays for Saturday, Nov. 28 10:18 p.m.
- Brown to discuss assault 10:18 p.m.
- Ansel Adams print up for auction 10:17 p.m.
- Queen plans visit to Canada 10:16 p.m.
- Horse group honors Swayze 10:15 p.m.
- Insuring young key to health-care 10:14 p.m.
- Military divorces edge up again 10:13 p.m.
- 4 killed at family dinner 10:13 p.m.
- Secret Service admits lapse 10:12 p.m.
- Christian church apologizes to tribe 10:12 p.m.
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
263 - Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
211 - RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks
202 - Thunder rolls by Jazz
136 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
133 - Boys basketball rankings
127 - Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin
112 - Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
108 - Letters: Trump card for believers
92 - Real Champions
87
It's finally time for the game that everyone has been waiting for all...
Carlos Boozer denied that playing so well against the Chicago Bulls held...
There are 14 BYU players from Salt Lake Valley. And there are four Utah...
Living in the past | 4:11 p.m. Nov. 27, 2009 Utah might be dragging 2008...
What does hunderlated mean? I just did a search on google, and I think you...
Living in the past | 4:11 p.m. Nov. 27, 2009 gotta love how Utah fans keep...
in the infamous words of Gob Bluth, "I think I've made a huge mistake." Good...
is a figment of Al Gore's imagination.
the concept that Ute defense is so much better than Y defense just doesn't...
Thank you for very much for sharing this inspirational story...A tribute to...
a rebuilding year. Go Utes!
hey all you cougar fans, this is how its gonna be utah is going to beat byu...
Well, Obabma isn't concerned about the stock market...he and the democrats...


