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NCAA rules are going to go to court yet again

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https://sports.yahoo.com/mens-college-basketball/article/president-trump-delivers-new-executive-order-attempting-to-regulate-college-sports-165338483.html

Getting rid of NIL collectives and limiting to just one transfer is not going to fly.

Can see two lifetime transfers, maybe?...barring coaching changes....but the money's out of the bag trying to reverse NIL money flow to college athletes.

Or maybe limiting players in P4/5 conferences to 2 transfers between P4/5 teams, and mid majors that are getting decimated to 3?

"The order directs the NCAA to create rules that mandate college athletes can play for "no more than a five-year period" and allows them to transfer schools only once before they graduate without having to sit out a season. The rule changes are scheduled to go into effect Aug. 1. A school that plays an athlete who doesn't meet these new limits could risk losing its federal funding."

espn.com

Edited by caulfield12

  • Author

https://www.si.com/college/president-donald-trump-signs-executive-order-save-college-sports

Call it the Saban Rules

"Trump will chair the panel, working with expected vice chairs Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Yankees president Randy Levine. Invitees include college sports leaders such as NCAA president Charlie Baker, commissioners from the Power 4 conferences and Group of 6 ranks, select athletic directors, university administrators — including Trump adviser and Texas Tech board chair Cody Campbell (Mr.NiL) — and former coaches Nick Saban and Urban Meyer; sports executives such as NBA commissioner Adam Silver, CEO of the USA Olympic Committee Sarah Hirshland, and New England Patriots president Jonathan Kraft; former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; media executives such as ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro and Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks; and business leaders such as Gerry Cardinale, David Blitzer and Marc Ganis, among others."

  • Author

9:41 5G 96

2498

Women's and Olympic sports are said to be a focus for Trump,who believes that non-revenue programs are being eliminated or at least defunded, as schools shift more resources to football and men's basketball in an intense and competitive recruiting environment where athlete compensation has been legalized.

Lastly, the order invalidates certain state laws that conflict with the order, which are likely to include several state statutes governing NlL.

But the order's true impact remains unclear and is in doubt considering that Trump's previous executive order,released in July, has created no real results within the industry.This one, however, is more comprehensive and direct as opposed to the last one, which only directed his cabinet members to create rules which never materialized.

Executive orders are subject to legal scrutiny, especially those that disregard court orders. In fact, courts have struck down several of the president's orders over the last several months, rendering them moot and unenforceable. In a White House roundtable event last month, the president himself predicted that any order would be legally challenged. He said that he "hoped"for a favorable judge (lol).

V

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