Yes
If you play one inning you cannot be redshirted. Baseball is different from football.
You have four years of original eligibility. You can gain a fifth year of eligibility by redshirting, which means you can practice and dress out for games with the team but cannot participate in any game during season or post-season play. If a player that has been redshirted plays in a game during his redshirted year, he will lose his fifth year of eligibility and is no longer redshirted.
usually be on a varsity roster and have a 3.5 GPA for a given year
They have a club team but not a NCAA varsity team.
NCAA Division One Freshmen could play varsity ball until 1954. The NCAA then changed the rules and freshman were ineligible to play. The rule was rescinded in 1973. That is why you see college greats like Robertson, West, Alcindor (Jabbar), Mount, Maravich, Carr etc. playing in only 75 to 90 games. They were eligible for only three varsity seasons. Maravich, Mount, Robertson, Lucas, Russell all would have put up some unreachable numbers if they played 140 games in a career like the guys of today. If Maravich had played in 113 varsity games he would have scored 5000 career points and Oscar would have scored over 3800 points.
No. In 2004 NCAA Division III schools adopted a policy of "no redshirting" for all sports. The only exceptions are "hardship" situations, generally limited to season-ending injuries suffered early in the season.
He will b now having win the NCAA in 2008 and the NBA title as part of the 2012 Heat
Wisconsin.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish is the varsity sports team of the renowned University of Notre Dame. They participate in 23 NCAA Division 1 intercollegiate sports.
Sport is called Athletics in colleges, universities and university-preporatory schools. There are many subsets of athletics, including varsity athletics and College Football.
The NCAA does not select a champion in Division I-FBS college football-the only varsity, NCAA-sponsored sport to not have an official championship. The NCAA does, however, recognize championships that are awarded by "major selectors;" organizations that are generally and widely regarded as major sources. Today, those sources are the BCS (in conjunction with its agreement with the ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Poll) and the Associated Press. Beginning with the 2014 football season, the College Football Playoff will replace the BCS.
you can't why did you even bother