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Justice Department Joins in Transfer Eligibility Lawsuit vs. NCAA

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This story originally appeared on WVSportsNow.com

On Thursday night, the Justice Department announced that they’re joining in on the multi-state lawsuit vs. the NCAA that challenges the transfer eligibility rules. In December, Judge John Preston Bailey ruled that all multi-time transfers would be eligible to play immediately without a waiver, as he extended the TRO until the end of the spring sports season.

The Justice Department says that the rules denies athletes educational opportunities. Now they’ll join 10 states, including West Virginia, as well as the District of Columbia in the lawsuit.

“We are proud to stand with our state law enforcement partners on behalf of college athletes across the nation,” said Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division. “NCAA Division I institutions compete with each other not just on the playing field or in the arena, but to recruit and retain college athletes. College athletes should be able to freely choose the institutions that best meet their academic, personal and professional development needs without anticompetitive restrictions that limit their mobility by sacrificing a year of athletic competition.”

This becomes a step closer to student-athletes having unlimited transfers during their college eligibility. The college basketball transfer portal window will open up in March for 45 days after Selection Sunday while football will have one smaller window during spring ball.

Sandy Schall, Coldwell Banker
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Kelvin Byrd
Kelvin Byrd
10 months ago

Another step in totally destroying college athletics and driving away fans.

Section 122
Section 122
10 months ago

Maybe the solution is that these NIL deals become 4 year contracts and if they break them they owe the money back.

Michael Roth
Michael Roth
10 months ago

What I find odd is their argument, if that is the actual argument, that the transfer rule impacts educational opportunities. How is that case? Kids can still go to any school that accepts them, so they have the educational opportunity, they just can’t play sports. Any competent judge would toss the suit if that’s the argument.

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