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Court Blows Up NCAA Transfer Rules
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<blockquote data-quote="leatherneckjacket" data-source="post: 984796" data-attributes="member: 3849"><p>I do not think this resolves the issue. Any entity that dictates the flow of labor that does not have anti-trust exemption would run afoul of existing labor law. As such, neither the NCAA or a group of university Presidents can come up with a set of rules for eligibility because it would be deemed as collusion.</p><p></p><p>Theoretically, a student athlete can cheat on his SAT (or receive direct compensation for play, or any other major NCAA violation), get caught, be designated by the NCAA as ineligible to play, but then sue the NCAA because it is impacting that persons ability to receive compensation for NIL. At this point, there are no rules that the NCAA can enforce without running afoul of labor law.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="leatherneckjacket, post: 984796, member: 3849"] I do not think this resolves the issue. Any entity that dictates the flow of labor that does not have anti-trust exemption would run afoul of existing labor law. As such, neither the NCAA or a group of university Presidents can come up with a set of rules for eligibility because it would be deemed as collusion. Theoretically, a student athlete can cheat on his SAT (or receive direct compensation for play, or any other major NCAA violation), get caught, be designated by the NCAA as ineligible to play, but then sue the NCAA because it is impacting that persons ability to receive compensation for NIL. At this point, there are no rules that the NCAA can enforce without running afoul of labor law. [/QUOTE]
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Court Blows Up NCAA Transfer Rules
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