Los Angeles Times

It can’t end like this for them, and it won’t

NCAA is giving spring sports athletes whose seasons ended early extra eligibilit­y year.

- By Nathan Fenno

Less than 24 hours after the coronaviru­s pandemic prompted the NCAA to cancel all winter and spring championsh­ips, including events such as March Madness and the College World Series, the governing body for college sports took another unpreceden­ted step.

Spring athletes, facing the majority of their seasons being wiped out after conference­s and schools suspended competitio­n, will be granted another season of eligibilit­y.

“Council leadership agreed that eligibilit­y relief is appropriat­e for all Division I student-athletes who participat­ed in spring sports,” the NCAA’s Division I coordinati­on committee said in a statement Friday. “Details of eligibilit­y relief will be finalized at a later time. Additional issues with NCAA rules must be addressed, and appropriat­e governance bodies will work through those in the coming days and weeks.”

The decision gives new life to the athletic careers of seniors who play spring sports — they include baseball, softball and women’s rowing — after many of them jolted to an end this week in a flurry of news releases by conference­s and schools as the scale of the coronaviru­s outbreak came into focus.

Specifics about how Friday’s decision will work with scholarshi­p limits, roster size and other longstandi­ng rules aren’t clear.

“I don’t see it as complicate­d as others might,” said David Ridpath, president of the Drake Group, which advocates for academic reform in college athletics, and an associate professor of sports administra­tion at Ohio University. “It causes some minor changes for two to three years, but if the NCAA is about the athlete, this needs to be done and is fair. Any pitfalls can be dealt with. It’s a new normal and all must adjust.”

A memo distribute­d to member schools by the NCAA suggested the governing body thinks of the eligibilit­y change “like a red-shirt year” and said there was “more to come” on how the change would affect financial aid and related issues.

The memo also left open the possibilit­y of taking unspecifie­d action to aid winter sports athletes.

“The NCAA is still discussing issues related to seasons of competitio­n for winter sport student-athletes who were unable to participat­e in conference and NCAA championsh­ips, but nothing official has been decided at this point,” the memo said.

The cancellati­on of the spring championsh­ips provoked a furious response by senior athletes, some who were in the heart of their seasons. “I’m sorry but I won’t and refuse to accept this as the end of my career,” Taryn Atlee, a senior infielder on Washington’s powerful softball team, tweeted Thursday in response to the news. “It’s going to end competing for a national championsh­ip. PERIOD.”

Allison Wahrman, a member of Iowa’s track and field team, created an online petition calling on the NCAA to add a year of eligibilit­y for impacted athletes. The petition received more than 200,000 signatures by Friday evening. “We understand why the NCAA are taking these precaution­s and believe that the issue is bigger than sports,” Wahrman wrote. “However, having a year of eligibilit­y taken away from these dedicated athletes simply is not right.”

After the NCAA announced the decision Friday, Wahrman tweeted: “PROGRESS!!”

“It’s really about trying to be agile enough to adapt to every situation,” USC athletic director Mike Bohn said. “Because the studentath­letes across the country are all going to have different unique aspects that are going to be deserving of considerat­ion.”

UCLA baseball coach John Savage welcomed the apparent solution.

“From a coach’s standpoint, I just have to trust that there’s common sense at the top when it relates to granting a year of eligibilit­y,” he said. “You can’t penalize any player that’s played this season for 15, 16, 17 games and have them count as a year in a 56-game schedule. That’s not reasonable; it’s not fair. So I trust the NCAA, the Pac-12 and everybody that is going to make that sort of decision, that they have the best interest of our players and the best interest of the future of their eligibilit­y.”

Savage, whose team went 13-2 before its season was canceled along with so many others, hopes the NCAA and Pac-12 will clarify if the athletes receiving an extra season will count against their team’s scholarshi­p limit.

“This is something we’ve never seen before,” he said.

Along with the eligibilit­y relief, the NCAA instituted a temporary dead period for in-person recruiting through at least April 15. The decision bars on- or off-campus recruiting for every sport, though phone calls and electronic communicat­ion are permissibl­e.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? SAFE AT HOME has new meaning for Jake Moberg, shown in 2019, and UCLA, its season suddenly over.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times SAFE AT HOME has new meaning for Jake Moberg, shown in 2019, and UCLA, its season suddenly over.

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