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NCAA to Adopt Rule Change to Allow Unlimited Transfers, Immediate Eligibility

Doric SamApril 17, 2024

EVANSVILLE, IN - MARCH 30: A NCAA logo is seen on the goal stanchion before the NCAA Division II National Championship Basketball game between the Minnesota State Mavericks and the Nova Southeastern Sharks on March 30, 2024, at the Ford Center in Evansville, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Allio/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Michael Allio/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The NCAA is adopting a new rule that will be a game-changer for student-athletes who want to transfer schools.

Per Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports, athletes who meet academic requirements will be allowed unlimited transfers and will be granted immediate eligibility under the new rule system.

Ross Dellenger @RossDellenger

As expected, the DI Council adopts new transfer rules to align with the current situation related to the court injunction.<br><br>Unlimited transferring for athletes who meet academic requirements. <a href="https://t.co/XOkNsjACqD">https://t.co/XOkNsjACqD</a>

Chris Vannini of The Athletic added that the transfer portal windows will remain in place, and players will not be able to play for two different teams within the same season.

The rule changes come after a court injunction in December allowed players who transferred multiple times to return to competition after previously being barred from doing so by the NCAA. While players and schools continued to operate as if those rules were permanent, they weren't officially in place until Wednesday's decision.

Under the previous rules, players were allowed to play right away after their first transfer, but they would have to sit for a year after each subsequent transfer. Per The Athletic's Nicole Auerbach, those rules were put in place in April 2021, just a few months before the NCAA removed its restrictions from blocking student-athletes from profiting from their name, image and likeness.

The current NIL regulations along with the updated transfer rules will surely shift the landscape of college sports. There has already been an increase in player movement over the past few years, which has led some to assert that college sports are becoming more and more like professional sports.

Still, student-athletes deserve the freedom to be able to play where they want, so Wednesday's decision will undoubtedly be a benefit for them.