Sources: Major Potential Shift In NCAA Transfer Rules
In a potentially paradigm-shifting proposal, the NCAA members may vote to allow all Division-I transfers to be eligible to play immediately.
Andrew Slater - Sep 5, 4:40 PM 30
In a potentially paradigm-shifting proposal, the NCAA members may vote to allow all Division-I transfers to be eligible to play immediately. The only potential restrictions are that student-athletes would be asked to meet a minimum GPA, in order to transfer immediately, and that any additional transfer would require the student-athletes to sit out a full year. The proposal, which is being solicited among members for feedback, is gaining increased traction in recent weeks, a source confirms.
Proponents of student-athletes being permitted to change schools as freely as coaches will undoubtedly laud this potential new development. The concern from some detractors may be the further encouragement of raiding smaller programs as well as the likelihood that the number of annual transfers will grow exponentially. The challenge of tracking potential tampering in pending transfers may also be a potential hazard of the new development.
Please let this become a rule

NCAA coaches loudly speaking out on potential transfer rule
Allowing college basketball players that option to transfer without penalty would be detrimental to the game, but the NCAA is considering it.
“It would turn into one of the dirtiest recruiting periods that you've ever seen,” Indiana coach Archie Miller told Scout.
- Evan Daniels - 22 hours ago
Every lay up and handshake line would turn into a recruiting pitch. Every interaction with an opposing player or parent would be an opportunity to lay the groundwork for a potential move.
“You'll have guys talking to your players when they are in your gym,” Miller added. “Coaches will recruit players right after games and now you can go directly to the source, it would cripple teams and programs.”
Essentially college coaches won't us to be against players having freedom because coaches can't trust their own ranks no to tamper

Could you imagine if Landry Shamet woke up in May and decided he wanted to play his final season at Kentucky? Or if Robert Williams decided he wanted to play in a different conference, so he transferred to Duke before heading off the to NBA Draft?
Or what if a high school prospect announced his college decision and said: “I’ll play my first year at School A, but I’m going to do my second year at School B, because I want a diverse experience.”
What exactly is wrong with any of these scenarios?

Oh, cacs are scared they can't keep Black athletes at one school to maintain their schools legacies

If the top schools poach on transfers that just means the top HS kids will have less committable spots at the top schools thus making the high major leagues more balanced








That bum gonna need to make some plays 1st.
. This ain't high school nomore Gary :Unoudonebuckedup:. So much fukkery if this gets implemented :DemBuckeyes: