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1
3
Goodman Says
No To Terps
PHIL JACOBS
Contributing Editor
asketball star Tamir
Goodman told the
Univeisity of Maryland that
he will not sign a national
letter of intent with the Atlantic
Coast Conference school in
November.
The 17-year-old Pikesville, Md.,
resident became a national sensation
last winter and spring when Maryland
announced it would consider
Goodman's request to not play on
B
Shabbat,
potentially
even asking
the National
Collegiate
Athletic
Association
to schedule
Terrapins
games
around the
weekly
Jewish day of Tamir Goodman
rest.
There was
speculation that Maryland coach Gary
Williams and the school were having
difficulty with Goodman's desires.
There also are rumors that the coach
might have asked Goodman, who is
Orthodox, to reconsider that stand in
a recent meeting.
Under NCAA rules, Maryland bas-
ketball officials cannot discuss the sta-
tus of an unsigned high school player;
in recent reports, they have been elu-
sive about their intentions, but
reportedly did not withdraw their
scholarship offer.
Goodman accepted a verbal offer
from Maryland earlier in the year
after leading the Baltimore Talmudical
Academy with a 35-point-per-game
average.
He was written about by Sports
Illustrated, chronicled by ESPN, other
major networks and newspapers from
all over the world, because of his
excellence in basketball and commit-
ment to the observance of the
Sabbath.
This past summer, a knee injury
hampered Goodman's play at several
basketball camps, which bring togeth-
er the nation's leading high school
basketball talent. There is speculation
that Maryland might have used the