Orlando Sentinel

NCAA set to loosen transfer rules

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The NCAA is about to make a monumental change to its transfer rules.

The Division I Council meets Wednesday and Thursday, and the agenda includes voting on a proposal that would grant all college athletes the ability to transfer one time as undergradu­ates without having to then sit out a season of competitio­n.

All indication­s are the proposal will pass. When it does, athletes in football, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and men’s ice hockey will for the first time be immediatel­y eligible to play after switching schools without asking for special permission.

For decades, the penalty of giving up a year of eligibilit­y helped deter athletes from transferri­ng, at least in those high-profile sports.

In all other NCAA sports, athletes were allowed to switch schools once before graduating and play immediatel­y.

„ A former student is suing the University of Evansville, alleging she was sexually assaulted by former men’s basketball coach Walter McCarty and that the school failed to provide a safe environmen­t. The Title IX lawsuit was filed Monday. In it, the former student described as a former athletic trainer at Evansville, alleges McCarty sent her inappropri­ate messages on social media and via text. She said that led to him pressuring her to visit his home, where he allegedly assaulted her on Dec. 9, 2019. The lawsuit also claims that the university received multiple other reports of alleged inappropri­ate behavior by McCarty after he was hired in March 2018. The university fired him on Jan. 21, 2020, amid a university investigat­ion over allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

NBA: Kevin Durant scored 31 points as the Nets beat the Timberwolv­es 127-97. The game was reschedule­d from the previous night, in the aftermath of a fatal police shooting of a Black man in a nearby suburb of Minneapoli­s. The T’wolves held a moment of silence before tipoff for 20-year-old Daunte Wright, who was killed after a traffic stop. Players from both teams wore black warmup shirts that read, “With liberty and justice for all,” with the last two words in all-caps for extra emphasis . ... Hall of Fame coach Bobby “Slick” Leonard, who guided the Pacers to three ABA championsh­ips, died. He was 88. As a player, Leonard led Indiana University to two Big Ten titles, was named a two-time All-American and made the winning FTs to give Indiana the 1953 national championsh­ip. He also was an NBA All-Star in 1963 while a member of the Minneapoli­s Lakers.

NHL: Stars All-Star F Tyler Seguin could make his season debut in a couple of weeks. Seguin, 29, had offseason hip surgery. Soccer: Paris Saint-Germain did just enough to knock defending champ Bayern Munich out of the Champions League and reach the semifinals for the second straight season. PSG lost a tense second-leg match 1-0 in Paris but advanced on away goals from the first leg. Bayern beat PSG in last UCL final. In other action, Chelsea advanced to its first semifinal since 2014.

WNBA: The WNBA will play a 32-game schedule beginning May 14 that includes mini two-game series in the same city to reduce travel. The playoffs will be traditiona­l format. The league will break for the Tokyo Olympics from July 15-Aug. 11.

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