The Denver Post

Teams discover ways to navigate NCAA’s new redshirt rule

- By Anne M. Peterson

Utah football coach Kyle Whittingha­m has one way of tracking the players who might be impacted by the NCAA’s new redshirt rule going forward. He and his staff are keeping a spreadshee­t.

While the spreadshee­t idea may not be exactly novel, it’s a good way of navigating the new rule that governs how many games a player can appear in while still preserving a redshirt season.

It used to be that even one game could cost a player an entire season of eligibilit­y. Now players can appear in up to four games and still qualify for a redshirt year.

Utah is among four Pac12 teams about to play a fifth game this week, which means some decisions loom.

Whittingha­m said there are just a handful of Utes players who might be impacted Saturday night when Utah plays at Stanford and going forward. Decisions have already been made on many players with redshirt eligibilit­y.

“It’s all new territory, I mean it’s much different than it was before,” Whittingha­m said. “But the overriding factor is if we think a guy can help us win, we’re going to use him. It doesn’t make sense to redshirt guys and try to preserve a year if you think they can help you win now, because coaching is a winnow profession.”

Whittingha­m added: “The shortanswe­r is yes, we’re tracking it closely and we’re getting to that point now that we’ve accumulate­d enough games that we have to be conscious of it every week.”

Colorado heads into its fifth game this weekend having popped into the rankings at No. 21. The Buffaloes, coming off a victory over UCLA, are one of just 14 undefeated teams left in the nation.

Buffs coach Mike MacIntyre said decisions are made on a casebycase and positionby­position basis, while also factoring in injuries.

“We have some freshmen that we’re not going to redshirt, we’re going to keep playing. We have some guys that have played one or two games that we’re actually holding for later in the season to use in those games if we need them, then some guys we’ve decided to go ahead and redshirt,” MacIntyre said.

For some programs, decisions about individual players — especially when it comes to true freshmen — have been obvious. USC freshman quarterbac­k JT Daniels has had growing pains but the Trojans (32, 21) are still very much at play in the Pac12 South.

At Oregon State, the Beavers have a gem in freshman running back Jermar Jefferson, who leads the Pac12 and is third at the FBS level with an average of 145.4 rushing yards per game. He tops the Pac12 with eight rushing touchdowns.

Oregon saw one consequenc­e of the new rule last week when the team confirmed that senior running back Taj Griffin had left the program after appearing in three games this season. He’s among nearly a dozen players nationwide who announced transfers last week.

Following their fifth game, the No. 18 Ducks had seven players who were no longer eligible to redshirt this season, including running back Travis Dye, tackle Penei Sewell and safety Jevon Holland.

Like other league teams, Oregon is also closely monitoring its quarterbac­k situation. Freshman quarterbac­k Tyler Slough has appeared in two games this season.

Additional­ly, QB Justin Herbert’s backup, sophomore Braxton Burmeister, has not utilized a redshirt year.

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