The NCAA will reportedly discuss the idea of allowing student-athletes in all sports a fifth year of eligibility in the near future, according to college basketball insider Jon Rothstein.
The NCAA is reportedly considering a rule change that would grant student-athletes across all sports five years of eligibility. Jon Rothstein of College Hoops Today reported the news on Friday.
One says the NCAA is considering a new eligibility model that would give players five seasons of eligibility in the future, as opposed to five years to play four seasons. Another says there's no ...
After suffering yet another series of courtroom defeats, the NCAA appears to be mulling a massive change to college eligibility rules that could alter the sport for good. According to CBS Sports ...
This is a decision that could reshape the landscape of college athletics, as the NCAA is reportedly considering a rule change that would grant athletes in all sports five years of eligibility.
Any eligibility change is likely to follow the impending approval of the House antitrust settlement in April and is one of many long-standing rules that the NCAA said this summer may see a ...
The NCAA is considering changing a rule that would permanently add a fifth year of eligibility for athletes in all sports. Per Jon Rothstein of College Hoops Today, the NCAA is looking into the ...
The NCAA is reportedly weighing an expansion of college athletic eligibility to include a fifth year for all athletes, per reports on Friday. A fifth year of eligibility would be a seismic shift ...
He alleges the NCAA’s bylaws that count his 2021 season at NMMI against his NCAA eligibility violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Pavia filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, which the ...
And then came a better idea: Pavia’s representatives filed a lawsuit against the NCAA, claiming the two seasons at a JUCO school should not count against his eligibility at an NCAA school.