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MBBALL Preliminary Injunction Hearing against NCAA today in Spokane (College Basketball news)

Brother Bear

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Interesting, the judge in the case is a former Gonzaga Law school alum. (Judge Polin) While this case currently deals with a Gonzaga hoopster, it could have far reaching consequences for many college athletes.


"In this case, the NCAA rule being challenged is the five-year window, which starts when a player graduates high school and gives them five years to complete their four years of NCAA eligibility. While Grant-Foster has missed multiple seasons due to injury, his five-year window began back in 2018-19 when he played at Indian Hills Community College, over seven years ago.

After two years at Indian Hills, Grant-Foster spent the 2020-21 season at Kansas, appearing in 22 games before transferring to DePaul. He played in just one game at DePaul in 202122 and zero games in 2022-23 while recovering from a pair of heart surgeries, resurfacing a year later at Grand Canyon, where he played in both 2023-24 and 2024-25.

The NCAA gave Grant-Foster an extra year in 2024-25 because one of his seasons, 2020-21 at Kansas, was wiped away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, since that ruling, the NCAA has also determined that players who spent time at a Junior College will get an additional year of eligibility in 2025-26, which will be a key part of Grant-Foster's argument for eligibility through this lawsuit."

 

Also of note... Grant-Foster is the 54th athlete to sue the NCAA in the last year!

I'm still sour over the NCAA and Montana situation
 
The timing of Monday's hearing is crucial for another reason: the deadline for schools to honor athletic scholarships for winter sports is Oct. 28. Grant-Foster's case was supposed to be heard in a Spokane County court this past Thursday, but the NCAA filed a motion on Wednesday to move the hearing to a federal court.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Rice denied the NCAA's motion and remanded the case back to Spokane County Superior Court on Friday, setting up an intriguing hearing on Monday that could see Grant-Foster go from ineligible to Gonzaga's layup line, in uniform, in a span of a few hours. The motion was rejected after the court found that there is no federal jurisdiction over Grant-Foster's case.
 
The NCAA who is tired of losing in court just sent a memo to member schools today:

The NCAA Board of Directors sent a memo to member schools Thursday regarding eligibility standards. From the memo: “While the rules provide opportunities for institutions to seek limited waivers of these [eligibility] rules in extraordinary circumstances, these waiver requests need to be filed in good faith for the system to work as intended. The eligibility rules are applied fairly and consistently, a commitment that must continue. … The trend of more than 70 student-athletes rushing to the courthouse to seek injunctive relief against eligibility rules is troubling as it concerns stability and predictability for member institutions and future student-athletes. … Coaches and other athletics department officials who encourage these lawsuits, and even support them on the premise that it is to benefit only one student-athlete, are undermining the very rules their schools have voted to approve and abide by, and are depriving future student-athletes of meaningful opportunities to compete. The Division I Board will explore fair ways to hold accountable institutions electing to not follow the rules that they have supported.”

 
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