College Football

Coaches, compliance personnel confounded by NCAA ruling complicating transfers between semesters

Coaches, compliance personnel confounded by NCAA ruling complicating transfers between semesters


College football compliance personnel across the country are scrambling for clarification from the NCAA over a ruling that appears to all but shut down the transfer portal at the conclusion of the fall semester.

Legislation adopted in August indicates there will be no room for programs to add undergraduate transfers between semesters given annual financial aid limits for 85 scholarship players. That would leave in limbo potentially thousands of athletes who have already entered the portal expecting to enroll and begin practicing at a new school at the start of the spring semester.

One compliance veteran described the situation as such: The portal is full of athletes going seeking an open door. The effect of current NCAA language is that all doors will be closed.

“What that means is they’re effectively shutting down the portal,” a distressed Power Five head coach told CBS Sports. “It’s a cluster.”

The NCAA did not immediately respond to a request for clarification. However, documents distributed to NCAA members on Tuesday appeared to have been removed from the association’s website Thursday afternoon.

Under NCAA rules, a football team that has reached its annual limit of 85 scholarships can replace some of those players between semesters under an assortment of circumstances: transfers, ineligibility, graduation, quitting the team. What the distributed documents state is that no four-year transfer could come in as a replacement and count against that sport’s annual scholarship maximum.

The only students who could replace those lost scholarships, then, would be incoming high school athletes and graduate transfers. Such a circumstance would be counter to the current movement toward NCAA deregulation and a more athlete-friendly environment; it could also potentially trigger legal challenges.

“Compliance governance people in conference offices across the country, their phones started blowing up,” said a NCAA compliance expert who spoke with CBS Sports under the condition of anonymity. “What [the NCAA] has in here caught a lot of people off guard.”

What was termed “guidance” in two NCAA documents sent out earlier this week is contrary to what most coaches, compliance officers and administrators understood Proposal 2022-20 to be. In late August, the NCAA Board of Directors 2022-20 established transfer windows in all sports. An NCAA Division I Question and Answer Document…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CBSSports.com Headlines…