In short, the rule has always been that a player is allowed to play four seasons in five years. Whether it was NCAA, NAIA, JUCO, or whatever. Two seasons in JUCO meant you only had two seasons left. This judge is saying no. A season in JUCO does not count as a season, so you can play two JUCO seasons and play four more NCAA seasons on top of that. This would be a massive change if it is upheld.
It also opens the door for more lawsuits. Will there now be a class action suit filed by everyone who played in JUCO and now feels they should have been able to play two more years.
Results 11 to 16 of 16
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Yesterday, 08:52 AM #11
Last edited by xubrew; Yesterday at 09:09 AM.
"You can't fix stupid." Ron White
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Yesterday, 09:00 AM #12
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Yesterday, 10:10 AM #13
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Yesterday, 10:20 AM #14
Yep. And what may come next is that a judge says the NCAA has no right to cap the number of seasons at all. If someone wants to play ten years, they can. I'm not joking when I say the NCAA needs to be proactive and realize this is a very real possibility. I'm also not joking when I say the NCAA is doing absolutely nothing.
"You can't fix stupid." Ron White
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Yesterday, 10:27 AM #15
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Yesterday, 11:07 AM #16
I would STRONGLY support five seasons in six years as opposed to four seasons in five years with the school a player exhausts their eligibility at being required to provide aid for the sixth year even if they've already played. With six years everyone has a chance to get all the way through grad school.
"You can't fix stupid." Ron White
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