‘Free agency’ of college football under full review
2:02 pm | February 14, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:
6:22 PM ET
The NCAA has started an all-encompassing review of the guidelines it uses when granting immediate eligibility to athletes who transfer from one school to another before finishing their degree.
The organization’s Committee for Legislative Relief started its review earlier this week during a meeting in Indianapolis and plans to solicit feedback from a variety of stakeholders before deciding if it needs to change any of its criteria for granting waivers to play right away. Several high-profile cases — such as Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields and Michigan quarterback Shea Patterson — since the NCAA established new rules last April have made the transfer waivers one of the most discussed and debated topics of college football’s offseason.
“We do believe attention on a small number of high-profile requests can skew perceptions of the scope of staff and committee review,” said Kaity McKittrick, a member of the group leading the review. “Each waiver request is reviewed individually, as they each present a unique fact pattern and almost always confidential information about the student.”
Several prominent coaches have criticized the new rules in the past months, saying the bar to play right away has been set too low and encourages a version of “free agency” among college athletes. Stanford’s David Shaw told ESPN it has become too difficult for coaches to try to manage rosters and that.”