Heard he's going to OSU
Heard he's going to OSU
Actually, Chad had a personal revelation recently and as a result will be taking his talents to Brigham Young University, coincidentally, the alma mater of the great Miles Batty.
Kid reminds me of another Robbie what's his name.....Dude should not lave Oregon if running id s priority. If not Eugene sucks...go free
That's why Nova and Furman got in the mix; scholarship available even this late. Both programs put all scholarships in distance and Furman just starting up so probably have plenty.
themanontherun wrote:
Coach @D wrote:are you out of your mind? Va ingen had to tell her what to do
Bearcat alum here, ran with Van Ingen.
You talk like you have inside knowledge, care to identify yourself? I'd be curious to see if I know you. If you do have any recent connection with the program, you should be able to recognize my handle on this site.
Based on what you posted, I'm pretty sure you don't know what you're talking about.
If Noelle were to return to the NE and stay close to home wouldn't Syracuse be his best running option? They have great coaching there and a great young team. Their academics are probably similar to that of Oregon.
It's Villanova.
Vanillanova
^Wow so original. Jealous much.
Sir Paul McCartney wrote:
who cares. probably failed out.
Nobody fails out of Oregon. It's equivalent to a CA JC.
Nobody fails out of anywhere. The grade inflation that has crept into the educations system assures that anybody with a warm body can pass enough classes to get a degree if they will at least make an effort to get to class now and then. Facts are facts.
Who is Chad Noelle?
"Jealous Much?" is OVER!
Maybe homesick or maybe he just doesn't like the competitive training atmosphere at the top level. Every day is a battle.
I've seen plenty of talented guys like him transfer from running factories and immediately improve in a less competitive environment. And run even better after doing so.
Society of Tired Cliches wrote:
"Jealous Much?" is OVER!
It was never in, unless you were an idiot blonde sorrority sister.
any idea where he'll go? and why he's leaving?
Here are three reasons for leaving:
1.Fleet,M
2.Dunbar,T
3.Johnson,B
The guy wants to be the big dog on campus that's why he's leaving....
Bad personality, didn't get along with Robert Johnson. Fought at nationals and that was the last straw.
break it up wrote:
I've seen plenty of talented guys like him transfer from running factories and immediately improve in a less competitive environment. And run even better after doing so.
Interesting. Can you name some of them?
Chad Noelle is a quality runner who apparently is leaving one of the top track programs. Some are curious as to why and where he might be going. According to what has been reported is that Noelle was unhappy. maybe he just wants a better program that fits him? However, there has been a lot of snarky remarks about why he is leaving - i.e., grades, demeaning where he might be going (Vanillanova); now it is jealousy of the other milers, bad personality and fighting with coach. Is there any truth here? Sounds an awful like some disgruntled Duck supporters. If you know something, by all means share it. If you really don't know anything, please keep it to yourself.
Original Gangsta wrote:
break it up wrote:I've seen plenty of talented guys like him transfer from running factories and immediately improve in a less competitive environment. And run even better after doing so.
Interesting. Can you name some of them?
I could name three of my own college teamates who went to Virginia, Central Michigan, and UW-Lacrosse after leaving Wisconsin and within a year went from 6-9th man on their cross team to top 10 college runners at programs where they were the big fish in the small pond.
And beating all their former teammates from the school they transferred out of.
These are guys from 25 years ago and none were Olympic medalists and American Record holders so you wouldn't remember them but they were blue chip recruits that were better off and ending up better runners in the long run going to a less competitive situation.