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Posted
17 minutes ago, Class of '66 Old Fart said:

With the news below, thought it might be worthwhile to start a thread solely for this rat's nest that has developed with regard to college eligibility.

Federal government is entering the fray.

https://www.on3.com/news/senators-introduce-bipartisan-college-sports-bill-with-transfer-coaching-movement-enforcement/

 

The Feds are about the only thing that can actually calm down the changing environment, but I can see all kinds of lawsuits going against the one time transfer rule to test the law if it does come about.  The pooling of rights will be interesting seeing the B1G and SEC have their own, and everyone else can collectively pool their rights.  

Posted

Re: on the one time transfer rule.

The motivation for this is that 'it's good for the game'.  The problem IMO is 'what's good for the game' does not equal what 'should be legal'.  We've talked about the fact that as a student you are allowed to transfer as many times as you like, and students do this if they think it is to their advantage.  IMO, any rule that should be applied to a general student is one that should be applied to a student-athlete.

 

Posted

I listened to this yesterday afternoon going from Boonville into Evansville for work, and it was a good conversation.  I don't care for Ted Cruz much, but you can tell that he seems to care about trying to do something to stabilize college sports.  He is probably right that the increase of the money could cause a lot of schools to cut a lot of programs including football. It is good conversation, and I think it is something that is really needed.  

Posted
On 5/27/2026 at 6:42 PM, Hoosierfan2017 said:

As messy as the current landscape is, it’s hard to imagine the federal government of all entities making it any better. But we’ll see. 

Agree, but on the other hand, as pervasively messy as college sports have gotten, Congressional action seems like it may be the only path to improvement. 

Generally, this is the kind of issue that Congress can effectively act on because of its non-partisan nature. I could see a bill introdcued with sponsors from both parties. The problem will be if a non-partisan stand-alone bill gets pork projects snuck attached to it, and then gets nuked because of that.

Posted

Here’s the thing the reason the SEC wants rules again is because they will just break them and go back to dominating. 

The SEC will break long before college football breaks. At least the old sec teams that is. 
 

Big Ten teams not being the ones to completely abandon their university systems hampered themselves for decades and now it’s proving to be a benefit for football and basketball.  
 

And anything to potentially fix the problem like some sort of cap on team spending but not individual spending. Is something that the SEC would still fight tooth and nail. 
 

The SEC only wants regulations so they can cheat.  Which isn’t a fix.  Regulations aren’t the way to go here. Maybe these SEC schools just need to focus on building an educated alumni base so they have money to spend 30 years from now 

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