The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

AP source: NCAA recommends free year of eligibilit­y for fall

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College athletes who play fall sports, including football, will be given a free year of eligibilit­y no matter how much they compete over the next 10 months if an NCAA recommenda­tion is approved later this week.

Two people with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press the NCAA Division I Council voted Wednesday to recommend all athletes whose fall seasons will be altered by the pandemic should get the year of eligibilit­y back. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because the council was still meeting and an official announceme­nt had not yet been made.

The proposal needs approval by the Division I Board of Directors, which meets Friday. If the board signs off, all athletes, whether they play or opt out because of concerns about COVID-19, will not be docked one of their four years of eligibilit­y.

The NCAA made a similar decision earlier in the year when spring sports had their seasons cut short by the pandemic. All of those athletes were permitted to get an extra year of eligibilit­y, with seniors who wanted to return not counting against roster or scholarshi­p limits.

Underclass­men will be guaranteed a waiver to get back the year of eligibilit­y if they want during their careers, but will count against roster and scholarshi­p limits.

COVID-19 concerns have led to all but six Division I leagues, including the Southeaste­rn Conference, Big 12 and Atlantic Conference­s, to postpone fall sports, with the hope of making them up in the spring semester.

But even those conference­s that are moving toward a fall sports season have decreased the number of games scheduled to be played and built in extra time in anticipati­on of disruption­s caused by COVID-19.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 are among the conference­s looking into an alternativ­e football season, starting maybe as soon as January.

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