The NCAA announced Friday that it is dramatically reducing the academic requirements that incoming Division I freshman athletes will need to meet in order to be eligible to practice and play during the 2020-21 school year.
These athletes will not be required to submit an SAT or ACT score, and their classroom work during this academic year essentially will be disregarded if they had earned at least a 2.3 grade-point average in 10 NCAA-approved core courses prior to the start of their senior year of high school. Seven of those 10 classes must be in English, math or science.
ArmyVet wrote:NCAA will not vote on this proposal until next year now.
On Thursday March 25, 2021 FDS wrote:
I know GTown has some big guys coming next year, but Qudus Wahab transferring hurts.
On Thursday March 25, 2021 GumbyDamnit! wrote:
Let’s see...developed by one of the greatest big men of all time to a point where he is unquestionably one of the biggest talents returning in conference on a team trending up.
My fear is this is the start of pure chaos. Unfettered free agency.
You think HS recruiting is an ugly business, just wait to see what happens when studs like Wahab are identified and convinced to come to greener pastures. Someone is undoubtedly in his ear. What a shame for G’town and Wahab’s own development.
The long-awaited change in college sports is close to becoming official
The NCAA Division I Council has officially adopted a measure that will allow athletes in all sports to transfer once without sitting a season, the NCAA announced Thursday. The measure will become NCAA rule if it is ratified by the Division I Board of Directors, which next meets on April 28th.
.Remember when the worst thing you could say about the one-time transfer rule was that it was akin to college "free agency"? Transfers run amok, leaving on a whim to the school of their choice? Turns out we're way beyond that.
The NCAA Division I Council on Thursday formally approved long-awaited transfer legislation that will allow all athletes in the five "revenue" sports one free transfer in their careers without sitting out a year-in-residence. The NCAA Board of Directors is expected to rubber stamp the legislation when it meets on April 28.
The implications go beyond the first glance. On its face, transfer freedom will be the latest development that diminishes the NCAA's shrinking power. The association is in this place with transfers because, as one administrator admitted to me years ago, "we were bound to be sued over it."
Transfer freedom had to be allowed because the NCAA's antiquated rules continue to be exposed to legal liability. There's also the hypocrisy to consider. The NCAA says the student-athlete experience should mirror that of the normal student. There wasn't anything normal about transfers in five sports (football, men's and women's basketball, baseball, hockey) being forced to sit out while athletes in 19 other sports did not.
"This rule change is long overdue," attorney Tom Mars told CBS Sports. "It represents a giant step in treating college athletes equally and fairly. It appears the NCAA has finally recognized that college athletes deserve the same freedom of movement as head coaches who are paid millions of dollars a year and freely move from one job to another."
Away we go with unprecedented transfer freedom.
"People say it's like NFL free agency. You hear that all the time. No, it's not," one Power Five football assistant said. "The NFL has a cap and they can pay money. You can outbid somebody. [In college,] you just gotta out-bullshit somebody."
Florida coach Dan Mullen has a vision of that future. "I have a feeling college football will be very different a couple of years from now," Mullen said. "I can't tell you if it will be better or worse. I can't tell you how it will be different. I just think it will be different."
Here's a glimpse.
1. There are more players in the transfer portal than there are available scholarships:
2. It's may not just be a "one-time" transfer exemption: One-time transfer legislation is meant to be just that -- one move without sitting out. But if recent events and the courts have taught us anything, all you need is a capable lawyer and a waiver request to make this transfer thing a revolving door. There will inevitably be requests for a second transfer within a career by players who are unhappy with playing time, wish to be closer to home, etc. You know the reasons. "The reality is, if you're making the right accusations, you're getting a waiver regardless," one administrator said. And what about graduate transfers? The whole idea was to reward an athlete who had completed his/her degree. You're going to deny a senior who wants his master's the ability to transfer for a second time?
3. Roster management will be key:
4. The immediate winners:
5. APR? What APR? The Academic Progress Rate is used annually as a measure of team academic achievement. Teams that don't measure up ...
6. Tampering will run rampant: It goes on now. Everyone knows it goes on now. One-time transfer rules or not, athletes are going to be lured to transfer by outside sources – high school coaches, personal trainers, parents, potentially new teammates. With the doors more wide open, tampering is going to be more prevalent than ever. "Let's call it what it is," Central Michigan coach Jim McElwain said. "Somebody makes a phone call and says, 'We got a scholarship at our school. Would the kid be interested?' There's a lot of that going on."
"Honestly when the guys reach the transfer portal, it's almost too late to go after them," SMU coach Sonny Dykes said. "You know about them because all these kids talk to each other. They all go through the recruiting process together."
Men’s Basketball Transfers by the Numbers (Slide 6 of 17)
In 2017 there were 689 transfers (12.6% of all Division I men’s basketball student-athletes)
In 2018 there were 704 transfers (12.7% of all Division I men’s basketball student-athletes)
In 2019 there were 694 transfers (12.6% of all Division I men’s basketball student-athletes)
In 2020 there were 648 transfers (11.8% of all Division I men’s basketball student-athletes)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------If you thought college basketball’s Season of Covid Management was wild, wait until you see what happens next. Reports of 800-plus players in the NCAA transfer portal for men’s basketball had Dick Vitale and everyone else in the coaching fraternity shrieking in public and shaking an angry fist at the sky.
On Wednesday April 7, 2021 Fieldhouse Flyer wrote:
2021 College Basketball Transfer Portal – VerbalCommits – updated Wednesday April 7, 2021
Total 2021 Transfers To Date: 1253
The NCAA Division I Council has officially adopted a measure that will allow athletes in all sports to transfer once without sitting a season.
Athletes in fall/winter sports like, football and basketball, will face a Saturday, May 1, 2021 deadline deadline to enter the transfer portal.
Total 2021 Transfers To Date: 1453
Total 2021 Transfers To Date: 1,517
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