'11 GA DE Silverberry Mouhon

#1

gardners_51609

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#1
Brother to current LB commit Kevin Mouhon.

Currently plays at Cincy and is a rumored Tenn possibly Transfer.

Had 8.5 sacks last year for Cincy. May graduate early and have 2 years of eligibilty remaining.

Silverberry Mouhon - Yahoo! Sports

Silverberry Mouhon Bio - GoBEARCATS.com - The Official Athletics Website of the University of Cincinnati

Norcross, GA
Norcross High School

Listed at:

6'4"
248lbs

From Montrell Hardy...
http://www.volnation.com/forum/tenn...02917-11-al-qb-jacob-coker-5.html#post9632354

Mouhon is a future NFL player IMO. Big, fast and physical. Very good run stopper as well as a pass rusher. I think he's someone who could potentially leave after his junior year and be a very high draft pick. He's right at 6'4 262 lbs. Great size already.

It'll be interesting to see what happens. Cincy will have probably their most loaded roster ever next season. They should win their conference for sure. And they have OOC games at Miami and Ohio State. They'll be a very interesting team to follow next year (should be a 10-2 or 11-1 type team) if they can keep the returning roster intact. I think they could be competetive with both Miami and OSU next and possibly win one of those games.

From Burhead...

http://www.volnation.com/forum/tenn...02917-11-al-qb-jacob-coker-5.html#post9632234

2012
19 total tackles
1 TFL - 3 yards
1 sack
1 BU
1 PD
1 QBH
1 FF

2013
37 total tackles
10.5 TFL - 58 yards
8.5 sacks - 56 yards
1 BU
1 PD
7 QBH
2 FF

He also started 11 games this year and played in all 12 so far.
 
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#3
#3
gardners, you should put Montrell's posts from the Coker thread on Mouhon in your OP.
 
#8
#8
Well he does have "berry" in his name. Sounds like a good fit. :)

Edit: Brillo gets it
 
#9
#9
Brother to current LB commit Kevin Mouhon.

Currently plays at Cincy and is a rumored Tenn possibly Transfer.

Had 9.5 sacks last year for Cincy. May graduate early and have 2 years of eligibilty remaining.

Silverberry Mouhon - Yahoo! Sports

Silverberry Mouhon Bio - GoBEARCATS.com - The Official Athletics Website of the University of Cincinnati

Norcross, GA
Norcross High School

Listed at:

6'4"
248lbs

From Montrell Hardy...
http://www.volnation.com/forum/tenn...02917-11-al-qb-jacob-coker-5.html#post9632354

For the sake of accuracy, he had 8.5 sacks, not 9.5.
 
#10
#10
Must be a smart kid to graduate in 2 years. Is that possible?

He's a redshirt sophomore. I'm not sure if he's expected to graduate early or not though. Nick Temple at Cincy is a junior who I think it going to graduate early. He and Mouhon are without question UC's two best defensive players.
 
#11
#11
Hey Volnation! Moo Moo and his family are in need of our full support, including many prayers and a lot of love!! Kevin's dad had a stroke today and is in ICU. Say a prayer for him and reach out to Moo Moo if you tweet. Show Moo a lot of love and support on twitter. Show him how we roll on Volnation! Thanks!

- Per Kevin Mouhon's thread (October 10, 2013)
 
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#12
#12
Cincinnati to Norcross, GA (7 hours, 24 minutes)

Knoxville to Norcross, GA (3 hours, 36 minutes)
 
#17
#17
Perhaps he doesnt need to graduate early to become eligible immediately if he can get a hardship waiver in light of his dad's unfortunate recent stroke.

Terrible news for that family, and im sure it would make life easier on that family for both boys to be together at Tennessee rather than being 3.5 hours and 7.5 hours from home.
 
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#19
#19
Does he want to transfer? Seems like he has a good thing going on at Cincy

I think him transferring would be risky. I think he'd start over what Tennessee has on its returning roster but you never know for sure. He is setting himself up well for a nice pay day in a year or two. His prior relationship with Butch and the staff no doubt would help if he did transfer, but he does have a good thing going on up here.
 
#20
#20
I think him transferring would be risky. I think he'd start over what Tennessee has on its returning roster but you never know for sure. He is setting himself up well for a nice pay day in a year or two. His prior relationship with Butch and the staff no doubt would help if he did transfer, but he does have a good thing going on up here.

If he cant beat what we've got the only payday may be in the area of his degree.
 
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#21
#21
If he cant beat what we've got the only payday may be in the area of his degree.

That is certainly true. He's way better than what Tennessee has on its returning roster IMO. Transferring is always a risky thing though no matter what.
 
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#22
#22
That is certainly true. He's way better than what Tennessee has on its returning roster IMO. Transferring is always a risky thing though no matter what.

Im not positive, but I'd venture to say UT's grad school options are a tad better than UC's.
 
#23
#23
That is certainly true. He's way better than what Tennessee has on its returning roster IMO. Transferring is always a risky thing though no matter what.

I guess one thing that is good as well is he has 2 years under this Strength staff. He knows what they expect.
 
#24
#24
The NCAA staff will use altered guidelines when determining which student-athletes will receive waivers of the rule that requires some student-athletes to sit out a year of competition after transfer.

Members of the Division I Legislative Council’s Subcommittee for Legislative Relief made the changes in response to current waiver trends and a belief among the membership that waiver decisions were not consistent from case to case.

The guideline changes are specific to waivers requested when a student-athlete wants to return to a school closer to home due to the illness or injury of an immediate family member (the student-athlete's mother, father, sibling, child or legal guardian). The subcommittee directed the staff to consider relief when:

- The school presents medical documentation of a debilitating injury or illness to a student-athlete’s immediate family member that is debilitating and requires ongoing medical care. The previous standard had been “life-threatening.”

- The student-athlete demonstrates he or she will be responsible for regular, ongoing caregiving responsibilities. The previous standard required the student-athlete to be the primary, day-to-day caregiver.

- The school is within a 100-mile radius of the immediate family member’s home, which demonstrates the ability for the student-athlete to provide regular, ongoing care. Previously, no distance limitation was in place.

- The school to which the student-athlete is transferring must submit a statement from the athletics director and faculty athletics representative confirming that the student-athlete will be relieved of responsibilities to the team in order to care for the injured or ill family member, and that the coaching staff will support such a departure.

Additionally, the subcommittee decided if a student-athlete’s family member is given a specific amount of time to live, that potentially outweighs all other guidelines.

Subcommittee chair Robert Philippi, associate commissioner for academics and compliance at Conference USA, emphasized that the guidelines were for staff’s initial consideration of the waiver request. Any staff decision can be appealed to the full subcommittee.

“It is important to understand the guidelines are for staff’s initial review,” Philippi said. “There are occasions in which the welfare of the student-athlete takes precedence or other unique circumstances are presented, and those cases should be appealed to the subcommittee.”

The changes to the guidelines are intended to be an updated standard for the staff to use when making waiver decisions. The guidelines have been in place since 2009 and are updated to fit the sentiments of the membership regarding waivers of transfer legislation.

“When transfer waivers are submitted by schools that reveal new trends for such cases, we will go to the membership for direction. The direction provided routinely comes in the form of guidelines for future cases,” said Kelly Brooks, NCAA director of academic and membership affairs.

“It is important to note that our staff also considers the timing of the immediate family member’s injury or illness diagnosis in relation to when the student-athlete makes the decision to transfer.”

The waivers do not affect whether a student-athlete can transfer to another school or receive financial aid at another school; the only issue is whether they can play immediately.

“In reviewing waiver cases, subcommittee members weigh the needs of the student-athletes against the competitive issues which the rules are based on,” Philippi said. “The new guidelines are a more realistic standard for balancing the academic workload, athletics commitments and personal obligations of student-athletes under these circumstances.”

The guidelines are just part of the waiver review process. Schools seeking a waiver of the transfer legislation for student-athletes with ill or injured immediate family members must submit various materials, including written medical documentation from the professional who diagnosed the condition, a letter from the student-athlete explaining the need for relief and information indicating that external third parties were not involved in the transfer.

Waivers (and waiver denials) of the transfer legislation have been well documented in the media, and the Division I Leadership Council is leading a division-wide review of transfer rules. That review began earlier this fall and will include a variety of constituents, including coaches associations and other governance bodies.

- Per November 2, 2012 release by NCAA

NCAA.org
 
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