Jackcrevol
Ain't Got Time!
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2005
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OK, experts, I have a question. Will the judge who hears the TRO case on Tuesday, rule on it that day as well or does he or she have time to deliberate?
A lot times the TRO is only able to be 10 days I think but it won’t matter anyways because the hearing is on the 13th and the requested date for a TRO is by the 6th so it would cover the whole time span until the preliminary injunction hearing anyways.The judge has all the pleadings he needs to determine the TRO issue, which if granted would remain in place at least until the injunction hearing on the 13th. That’s why the filing deadlines were set on the weekend so that the judge would have both positions laid out before deciding whether to grant the temporary relief which can only last for 14 days without further action.
shot the ball today at kids school playground, whilst they played.I loved the old tartan surface.
I remember not being able to touch the net at my school gym.....but I could at Stokley...........![]()
And then they try to rationalize it as fans' right to criticize players on a message board.Absolutely nothing wrong with it at all. It was clear that JJJ was not playing at his peak. The issue I have is the way some people do it. Calling him names, saying he sucks, etc. If you want to say he is not playing well and that maybe CRB needs to think about giving him less minutes until he gets it together, that is no problem for me. It is a problem when you say he is trash, or photoshop his picture on a milk carton.
YepY'all need to simmah down now! All this worry over the NCAA, it's not right when I have to be the voice of reason. Everything will be fine, and we will defeat their heinous allegations in a court of law. Then they can go investigate why Georgia has a drinking problem.
I'm reading the actual SCOTUS opinion now for the first time. Only read snippets and commentary heretofore. Only four of five pages in atm, and I'm not attorney, but running thoughts in this and upcoming posts for anyone interested...
I belabor that point because it seems to be the NCAA's primary defense in this latest Anti-trust suit filed by states TN and VA.
Thank you. And thank you, too @JackcrevolThe judge has all the pleadings he needs to determine the TRO issue, which if granted would remain in place at least until the injunction hearing on the 13th. That’s why the filing deadlines were set on the weekend so that the judge would have both positions laid out before deciding whether to grant the temporary relief which can only last for 14 days without further action. Rule 65 of the federal rules of civil procedure.