The NFLPA and NBAPA sent a letter to lawmakers today supportive of the Protect College Sports Act. The NFL also released a statement in support of the Act.
DI Cabinet modifies age-based eligibility concept; Details of concept continue to be refined ahead of anticipated vote later this month.
https://t.co/oMsgOrXfnV
Exclusive to @YahooSports: Sens. Ted Cruz & Maria Cantwell detail their groundbreaking legislation:
*1X transfer
*5-yr eligibility/pro player ban
*hard cap
*5% max agent fee
*"Lane Kiffin Rule"
*optional pooling of TV rights
*prohibits "super league"
More-
https://t.co/Kva5gesC5l
Tom Brady: “You need coaches that push you outside your comfort zone because that’s how you grow and that’s how you develop self confidence and self esteem. They push you to deal with failure.”
In an email sent today to member schools, NCAA president Charlie Baker attached a three-page document outlining the association’s age-based, 5-year eligibility concept, along with a Q&A. It does not specifically address grandfathering current athletes.
Division I Women’s Basketball Coaches and Prospective Student-Athletes: Check out the graphic below regarding the remaining dates of the 2026 April calendar.
UPDATE: The NCAA DI Cabinet will hold a further discussion on age-based eligibility later today. This idea would essentially eliminate redshirts and give college athletes five years of eligibility starting when you graduate high school or when you turn 19. Whichever is earlier.
President Trump signed an executive order reshaping college sports. Here’s what it includes:
• 5-year participation window
• One transfer without penalty
• Ban on "fraudulent NIL schemes"
• Protections against “unscrupulous agent conduct”
Full story ⬇️
The NCAA D-I Cabinet will vote today on blind-transfer legislation that would penalize coaches and programs for adding players who don’t enter the portal outside the transfer window.
The vote comes with significant momentum behind it.
https://t.co/lpmqNepiiZ
An SEC president says the conference might be forced to “go our own way.”
During key meetings in Nashville this week, the league’s executives are set to hold that discussion.
More in our weekly sports biz column for @On3 - https://t.co/qrbqhzM7V1