Yuma Sun

NCAA allows transfers to be immediatel­y eligible, no matter the times they’ve switched schools

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO AP COLLEGE SPORTS WRITER

NCAA athletes will be immediatel­y eligible to play no matter how many times they transfer – as long as they meet academic requiremen­ts – after the associatio­n fast-tracked legislatio­n Wednesday to fall in line with a recent court order.

The NCAA announced the Division I Council’s decision becomes official Thursday when its meeting adjourns. The change still needs to be ratified by the DI Board next week, but that is expected.

The new rules will go into effect immediatel­y, though in reality they have already been enacted through a lawsuit filed late last year.

Transfer windows, which are sport-specific, remain in place and require undergradu­ate athletes to enter their names into the portal at certain times to be immediatel­y eligible at a new school. Graduate students can already transfer multiple times and enter the portal outside the windows while maintainin­g immediate eligibilit­y.

A coalition of state attorneys general late last year sued the NCAA, challengin­g rules that forced athletes that wanted to transfer multiple-times as undergradu­ates to sit out a season with their new school.

A judge in West Virginia granted the plaintiffs a temporary injunction, lifting requiremen­ts for multiple-time transfers to request a waiver from the NCAA to be immediatel­y eligible to compete.

The NCAA quickly requested the injunction be kept in place throughout the remaining school year to clear up any ambiguity for athletes and schools. The associatio­n has had to issue guidance to its members to clarify what that means for next season. Now the rules match the court ruling.

By eliminatin­g year-in-residence the for socalled transfers, an athlete must be academical­ly eligible at the previous school and not subject to any disciplina­ry suspension or dismissal to compete immediatel­y at a new school. Transferri­ng athletes must also meet progress-toward-degree requiremen­ts before competing.

“We hope that this practical approach to transfer eligibilit­y requiremen­ts will encourage student-athletes to make well-informed decisions about transferri­ng and the impacts such a move could have on their ability to graduate on time in their degree of choice, particular­ly as it relates to transferab­le credits,” Florida deputy athletic director and council chairwoman Lynda Tealer said in a statement.

The board will ask the committee on academics to explore creating a new metric – similar to the NCAA’S Academic Progress Rating – that would hold schools accountabl­e for graduating the transfers they accept.

The portal windows are currently open for both football and basketball, and the lifting of restrictio­ns on multiple-time transfers has led to an uptick in athletes looking to switch schools. In a notable move that would not have been permissibl­e without a waiver under previous rules, Alabama offensive tackle Kadyn Proctor entered the portal in January after Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban retired, committed to Iowa, but then changed his mind during the spring and has reentered the portal with the intention to reenroll at Alabama.

The DI Council also moved forward on legislatio­n that would allow schools to be more actively involved in securing sponsorshi­p deals for their athletes. Schools could still not directly pay athletes, but they could facilitate NIL opportunit­ies between third parties and athletes.

 ?? ED HILLE/AP ?? WACHOVIA CENTER OPERATIONS MANAGER JIM MCDONALD (left) and carpenter foreman Tim Allen remove the protective
lm covering the NCAA logo at mid-court on the center’s basketball court on March 15, 2006, in Philadelph­ia.
ED HILLE/AP WACHOVIA CENTER OPERATIONS MANAGER JIM MCDONALD (left) and carpenter foreman Tim Allen remove the protective lm covering the NCAA logo at mid-court on the center’s basketball court on March 15, 2006, in Philadelph­ia.

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