Dayton Daily News

OHSAA vote could drasticall­y change rules for transfers

Athletes’ participat­ion will be determined in a ballot this spring.

- By Marc Pendleton Staff Writer

The mandatory sit-out period for high school student transfers will change if an amendment to the Ohio High School Athletic Associatio­n transfer bylaw is approved by associatio­n members in a vote this spring.

If approved, transfers would sit out the second half of the regular season and the postseason. However, a transfer would be eligible in the preseason and the first half of the regular season.

OHSAA transfer rules apply only to sports a transfer participat­ed in at another school the previous 12 months. Sit-out rules do not apply to transfers who participat­e in another sport.

Currently, transfers who don’t meet any of the exceptions to the OHSAA transfer bylaw are required to sit out all the preseason and the first half of the regular season, then become eligible for the second half of the regular season and the postseason.

“Much of the feedback we have received from the membership indicates that the current consequenc­e — sitting out the first half of the regular season — is not a significan­t deterrent,” OHSAA commission­er Dr. Dan Ross said in a statement.

“If a student knows that the end of the regular season and the tournament will still be available, they are more likely to transfer. We don’t believe that a high number of transfers is good for education-based athletics.”

Transferri­ng for athletic reasons among boys and girls has become a hot-button national issue and has dramatical­ly increased among high school students in the last decade, although no com-

‘We don’t believe that a high number of transfers is good for education-based athletics.’

Dr. Dan Ross OHSAA commission­er

bined statistics are available. This coincides with a transfer spike in collegiate football and basketball players during the same period.

The online site verbalcomm­its.com tracked 882 men’s basketball players who transferre­d to new college programs this season.

The National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns governs all 50 state organizati­ons such as the OHSAA. According to the NFHS, most states have amended their transfer bylaws in the last decade and most of those changes have lessened a transfer’s sit-out period before becoming eligible to participat­e in sports.

There are 11 exceptions to the OHSAA’s transfer bylaw. The most common is a change of residency. If that happens, a transfer is immediatel­y eligible in all sports.

Another exception to the current transfer bylaw is if a student transfers to a school 50 or more miles away, yet maintains the same residence. There also is no sitout period in that case and the transfer is immediatel­y eligible to participat­e in all sports.

The new transfer proposal was one of seven items the OHSAA Board of Directors approved during their monthly meeting on Thursday at Columbus. Member schools will vote on those items from May 1-15. A majority vote among the 819 OHSAA members is needed for each proposal to pass.

If approved, the new transfer bylaw would be immediatel­y effective and apply to students who transfer after May 16. Contact this reporter at 937225-2381 or email Marc. Pendleton@coxinc.com.

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