• TrainingRm67
    202
    What does everyone think of the proposed new eligibility rule? The intent is for a vote on the proposal this summer, with implementation beginning in Fall 2026.

    Student-athletes would get five years of competition eligibility within a five-year window that begins the academic year after they graduate high school or turn 19 years old, whichever happens first. Division I student-athletes would no longer be limited to only four seasons of competition within their five-year eligibility window.

    • Athletes with remaining eligibility beyond the 2025–26 academic year are granted flexibility, allowing them to choose either the new age-based model or the previous rules, depending on which is more beneficial.

    • High school prospects from the spring 2026 graduating class and later will adhere exclusively to the new age-based model.

    • The traditional redshirt year, medical hardship waivers, and other discretionary extensions to eligibility are effectively eliminated. Any season played during the five-year window counts toward the limit.

    • Waivers are no longer available to extend competition, except for narrow cases involving pregnancy, official religious missions, or active-duty military service.

    • The changes do not retroactively strip eligibility from athletes who completed their fourth year by spring 2026.

    Some questions people might respond to:

    A good or bad move in general?
    Will there be legal challenges? If so, on what grounds?
    How might it affect the influx of international players with previous experience in foreign professional leagues?
    Unexpected consequences?
    Good or bad for UCD?
  • eastbayaggie
    176
    I thought Mormon influenced teams would get adversely affected but there appears to be exceptions to this rule.
  • aggiedt60
    14
    What was wrong with the 4/5 rule? You had 5 years to play 4. It allowed for redshirting in the extra year.

    Covid and the portal turned the whole process into a cluster and you can blame the NCAA for the mess and mismanagement. Having 27 years olds playing against 19 and 20 year olds created a totally uneven playing ground.
  • TrainingRm67
    202
    Nothing was wrong with it, but it wasn't working. Everyone was looking for a way around it, usually via litigation. I think the hope is that a more specifically defined set of criteria, with fewer grey areas, will avoid most of the issues. We'll see.

    Plus, the majority of all students (53%) do not finish a degree within 4 years. The average is 5 years, 10 months to finish a degree. D1 athletes seem to do slightly better than the general student, mostly due to the amount of academic support provided. That statistic is slightly skewed because it doesn't track all athletes, only retained athletes who enter as freshmen. The proposed 5/5 may better align with reality.
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