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The offensive line crisis in college football: What’s behind the decline?

Less than 48 hours after Washington lost in the College Football Playoff National Championship to Michigan in January 2024, it was open season on its roster. The primary targets were obvious: the Huskies’ Joe Moore Award-winning offensive line, regarded as the best in college football.  Essentially, every scholarship offensive lineman on the team was contacted through […]

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Less than 48 hours after Washington lost in the College Football Playoff National Championship to Michigan in January 2024, it was open season on its roster. The primary targets were obvious: the Huskies’ Joe Moore Award-winning offensive line, regarded as the best in college football. 

Essentially, every scholarship offensive lineman on the team was contacted through intermediaries. It only became more complicated when it was clear that coach Kalen DeBoer was in line to take over for Nick Saban at Alabama.

Out of the 10 offensive linemen listed on Washington’s depth chart in the title game, eight were sophomores or younger. These days, two remain on the roster. Tackles Troy Fautanu and Roger Rosengarten declared for the draft. Center Parker Brailsford followed DeBoer and offensive line coach Scott Huff to Alabama. Guards Julius Buelow and Nate Kalepo transferred to Ole Miss. Tackle Jalen Klemm remained for a year but left for Arizona State after the 2024 season. 

Last season, new Washington coach Jedd Fisch trotted out three transfers (out of five spots) to start along the offensive line. The new-look Huskies fell from No. 17 to 127 in pass blocking grade, per Pro Football Focus. The team went 6-7. In the first seven years of the CFP, the national runner-up won at least 11 games five times the next year. Since Name, Image, Likeness laws became part of the game in 2021, two of three finalists finished with losing records the next year. 

Welcome to the new world of college football. Transfers and pay-for-play under the guise of NIL have created a chaotic marketplace that has hit the heart of the team harder than anywhere. 

At its core, the offensive line is the heart of football. It requires the most clear and coordinated action from the biggest and most lumbering of athletes on the field. It forces players to bulk up to tremendous sizes while retaining their balance, feet and hands. 

But in the era of NIL and the transfer portal, every player is a target. Last offseason, starting-caliber linemen had offers nearing $500,000, according to CBS Sports, making for truly difficult decisions. With revenue sharing on the horizon, the offers have gotten higher. Development falls to the wayside. Priorities shift. And, even for the best coaches in the game, stocking a championship-level offensive line rotation has never been more complicated. 

“Wherever I’ve been, the development of offensive linemen is still the same, but the keeping [of] them is totally different,” Arkansas coach Sam Pittman told CBS Sports. “I have been surprised when guys come in here and they’re going, ‘Coach, I need X amount of dollars.’ I go, ‘God dang, man, you played two games.'” 


The root of the problem

One of the most decorated college linemen of the 1990s, Aaron Taylor sees a drop in play these days. 
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Legendary Notre Dame offensive lineman Aaron Taylor has made it his life’s work to bring attention to offensive linemen. In 2015, the CBS Sports analyst helped launch the Joe Moore Award, the only major college football honor that annually spotlights a unit instead of an individual. 

Taylor identifies six key criteria as being central to the award: toughness, effort, teamwork, consistency, technique and finishing. He points to 2016 Iowa as one of the most emblematic groups to ever win the award. Finding comparable offensive lines is getting more difficult in this era. 

“Fundamentals and physicality are what launched this award,” Taylor told CBS Sports. “That’s becoming harder and harder to find.” 

All the outside forces impacting college football have done a number on offensive linemen, who are more context-dependent than anyone outside of quarterback. Physically, players have to take part in a development plan that will take several years, even for elite prospects. Mentally, every system asks for precise movement and technique. There’s little preparation for it, and finding comfort in your development process is critical. 

“Offensive line is the most developmental of all positions,” Miami offensive line coach Alex Mirabal told CBS Sports. “You know why? Blocking is not natural. It’s something that you have to teach from the ground up, and it takes time. You’re teaching them to do something that’s unnatural. These bodies are so big, it takes time to gain the core strength they need being a 345-pound man. It just takes time.” 

Even for elite offensive line evaluators, it takes time to know what they have. Take Texas offensive line coach Kyle Flood. He signed 17 offensive linemen in his first four years with the program, including the 2021 transitional class. All five starters on the 2024 offensive line were homegrown players, but not necessarily the most obvious prospects. 

Guard DJ Campbell and tackle Kelvin Banks were the Longhorns’ No. 1 and 2 linemen in their recruiting class, but No. 6 Cameron Williams emerged as a star at right tackle. Center Jake Majors and guard Hayden Conner were older players who found their groove late in their careers. Only six of Flood’s 17 linemen have started a game heading into 2025; Banks was the only true freshman to do so. The rest needed time. 

“It’s not easy evaluating big people,” said Andrew Ivins, who oversees recruiting rankings for 247Sports. “Football is a genetic sport where size is always going mater. So, not only do you have to find the biggest individuals, but you have to find the ones with the quickness and balance to counter all the twitched-up pass rushers that everyone is rostering these days. 

Of course, those same individuals must also be willing to drive an assignment into the ground every single snap while sealing off run lanes. It’s a taxing job and it’s extremely difficult to identify the ones that are going to have a chance to do it at the game’s highest levels when they are 15, 16 and 17 years old.”

Hanging over the position group, too, is the schematic change in the game. Increased passing meant that linemen trained far more moving backwards than pushing forward. Quick passing and the run-pass option both de-emphasize lines and let players hold their blocks for shorter periods of time, making fundamentals less costly. 

Offensive Line Trends (P4 vs. P4)

2021

8.41%

4.28

2022

8.27%

4.26

2023

8.42%

4.21

2024

8.64%

4.11

Continuity along the offensive line is paramount as five players aim to act as one. The results speak for themselves. Out of 40 players to earn All-America honors from CBS Sports in each of the four post-NIL seasons, 36 were homegrown players. Out of 50 players to start on a Joe Moore Award semifinalist in 2024, 39 of them were homegrown. Two of the three finalists, Army and Texas, were completely built through high school recruiting. 

Part of it comes down to priority; elite offensive line prospects are well taken care of by their original schools. However, there’s little replication for units growing and developing together over the course of multiple years, both physically and in communication. The consequences over hundreds of snaps can be devastating. 

“Consistency across the offensive line in general is huge because one bad play from the offensive line can blow up an entire drive,” Pro Football Focus head of analysis Billy Moy told CBS Sports. “As soon as you start to remove parts of that consistency, the floor isn’t necessarily going down a little. You’re going way down because of the ramifications it can have, especially in the college season where every single win matters.” 

The cost of transfers

A trench boss by trade, Pittman has been frustrated with the fluidity of o-line rooms in the new era. 
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Pittman is considered one of the great offensive line coaches in history after developing many of the best units of the past several years. He was offensive line coach at Georgia when the program brought many elite players into the program, including most of the starters that ultimately won back-to-back national championships. 

As a head coach, though, results have been more mixed. The 2021 group was great. The 2023 one struggled. Last year, Arkansas managed to pull together a solid offensive line behind four transfers. After the season, two transferred out along with three other key depth pieces. 

“Now it’s a deal where the cohesiveness of that group is not the same,” Pittman said of rotating transfers. “And I think there’s so much power in the cohesiveness of the group. It’s the most players in one area at a time and it’s a vital part of the team. So the camaraderie and the togetherness of that room is not the same.” 

Arkansas, like many teams, feels decent about their potential starting five. Past that, it’s getting harder to know. The lack of quality depth has been a major red flag for even many of the elite teams in college football. 

“One of the things we noticed this year was that a single injury was having not just a 1-time effect but a 2- or 2.5-time effect on the play of the unit as a whole,” Taylor said. “We’re still trying to figure out what the hell was going on, but when playoff teams all suffered major injuries, the decline in play was seismic. A lot of them fought hard and got better as the season went along, but that’s something we hadn’t seen before.” 

Oregon was one such team last year as the Ducks played depth to start the season. Idaho and Boise State stymied the unit as the games were decided by a combined 13 points. Losing a center can prove especially devastating as the calls and communication structure can change with another snapper. 

Ohio State, the eventual national champions, also had to fight through some major injuries. Left tackle Josh Simmons, a future first round pick, tore his ACL in a loss to Oregon. Weeks later, center Seth McLaughlin tore his Achilles and Ohio State’s offensive line strung together a disastrous performance in a loss to Michigan. They eventually pulled together behind a monstrous effort from star Donovan Jackson, but a previous CFP system wouldn’t have been quite as forgiving. 

While the transfer losses can cause discomfort in a single season, it can completely screw up the long-term planning. A few whiffs, a few transfers and suddenly a projected offensive line depth chart for the next year can vanish. When that happens, you have no choice but to return to the portal once again. 

Flattening the field

Four years into the NIL era, offensive lines are less consistent. There’s little argument. The days of Alabama or Georgia hoarding the very best players in America and deploying generational lines is simply over. However, while the top groups are leaking talent, the rest are taking advantage. 

Last season, the gap between the No. 2 Georgia and No. 11 Penn State in the 247Sports Talent Composite was one of the smallest gaps between two such spots in recent years. That lack of depth is starting to drag elite teams back to the pack. 

“To me, it’s almost like a redistribution of wealth,” Moy said. “If Alabama recruits eight offensive line prospects in a given season, half those guys aren’t going to see the field at all. It just allows other schools to go after those sorts of guys. As the wealth gets spread around and more floors get raised, that’s how you’re going to see that gap closing from the middle up as teams just get more consistently good across that spot.” 

Season of major parity for college football in 2025? Deep contender field looks to break glass ceiling

Chris Hummer

Season of major parity for college football in 2025? Deep contender field looks to break glass ceiling

That Alabama redistribution has already been felt. In 2023 and 2024, seven Alabama offensive linemen transferred from the program. Five of them became primary starters at power conference schools. Where the Tide lose depth, programs like TCU and Florida gain starters. It allows players to get both the most money and also create the best possible fit. 

Additionally, the NIL component has been a serious game changer in shaping recruiting battles. Suddenly, the elite level schools are starting to get squeezed by newcomers for top prospects. 

“I think that we all thought that when NIL came in that there would be superteams because some would have more money than others,” Pittman said. “But what we’ve seen is that parity has grown. I think that has a lot of correlation between the quarterback and the offensive line.” 

Take a player like Jackson Cantwell, rated one of the top offensive line prospects in the Class of 2026. He was considered a Georgia lean for much of his process. At the end, Miami came to the table. They offered him both significant money and a coaching staff that has done exceptionally well with offensive linemen. NIL gave them the chance to make a closing statement that could compete with Kirby Smart dropping rings on the table. 

Since the days of Knute Rockne and Fielding Yost, offensive linemen are the players who have changed the least. Five big bodies are all that protects the offensive skill talent from some of the most athletically gifted humans on the planet. They have to do it while walking backwards, and getting little recognition in the process. 

Modern college football prevents a litany of complications. The Wild West of player movement has arrived. However, those who manage to ride the bronco and instill the fundamentals are the ones who are best positioned to succeed in this era. To win big, an offensive line coach has no choice but to convince players to stay the course. 

“You’ve got to develop your room as if you’re going to have them there for five years,” Mirabal said. “Even if your kid is coming only for a year, you’ve got to coach him up like if you have him. I haven’t allowed it to change what we expect from the players.” 





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NCAA’s Legal Risks Endure Despite $2.8 Billion NIL Settlement

A federal judge’s final approval of the NCAA’s $2.8 billion settlement with student-athletes won’t quell all the antitrust threats for the sports organization as it seeks to provide stability in college sports. Judge Claudia Wilken of the US District Court for the District of Northern California in a 76-page order June 6 found the settlement […]

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A federal judge’s final approval of the NCAA’s $2.8 billion settlement with student-athletes won’t quell all the antitrust threats for the sports organization as it seeks to provide stability in college sports.

Judge Claudia Wilken of the US District Court for the District of Northern California in a 76-page order June 6 found the settlement fair to class members and overruled numerous objections, including over a controversial spending limit cap, viewing the deal as a compromise between the parties.

The deal removes a huge headache for the NCAA, in that the claims of a huge consolidated class action fall by the wayside, and, for the first time, a system will exist in which schools can pay athletes directly. But the settlement won’t insulate the NCAA from antitrust challenges alleging anticompetitive practices, said Cal Stein, litigation partner with Troutman Pepper Locke.

Objectors are also likely to appeal the settlement, while future athletes could bring separate suits challenging pay limits and roster limit provisions. Opt-out plaintiffs who declined to participate in the settlement could pursue individual claims. Other cases with claims against the NCAA outside the settlement remain in play.

Attorney Steven Molo, who represents athletes opposed to the deal, said in a statement to Bloomberg Law that he is reviewing the order and “considering our options.”

“I don’t think it’s a silver bullet,” Stein said of the settlement. “The NCAA saw the writing on the wall. They needed to get out of the way of this freight train, and they managed to do it on terms that they can live with. But it’s very clear to me that there is going to be continued litigation.”

Push for Legislation

Another sign that the NCAA expects legal trouble: NCAA President Charlie Baker made another appeal to Congress for college sports legislation even as he praised the settlement approval.

“You wouldn’t be doing that if you didn’t have fear of this new system being subject to challenges and legal difficulties,” Stein said.

Rep. Lisa McClain (Mich.), the fourth-ranking member of GOP House leadership, and Rep. Janelle Bynum (D-Ore.) introduced a bill (H.R. 3847) Monday that would standardize athletes’ NIL pay.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee has a June 12 legislative hearing on separate draft legislation by Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) that is considered largely in line with the NCAA’s wishes. The draft includes a provision that would address antitrust liability in college sports.

Follow-on Litigation

The judge’s approval doesn’t function as an endorsement of the legality of the NCAA’s rules and her order “invites follow-on litigation,” said Christine Bartholomew, a law professor at University at Buffalo focused on antitrust issues.

“The judge just recognizes that this doesn’t provide complete relief,” Bartholomew said. “This opinion, in my mind, is written with the realization that there is a very high likelihood of appeal.”

Expect to see appeals from objectors in the next month, with future lawsuits thereafter, said Michael Carrier, a professor at Rutgers Law School who writes about antitrust and intellectual property.

An appeal could be an “uphill climb” for plaintiffs covered by the deal, but that doesn’t mean they won’t be successful, he said. “There’s a chance that an appellate court could overturn it.”

Smaller colleges that feel disadvantaged by the NCAA’s settlement’s revenue-sharing model also may pursue litigation, said William Lavery, a partner in Clifford Chance’s global antitrust litigation practice.

Institutions can distribute up to 22% of the average revenue generated by schools in conferences including the ACC and Big Ten. The cap is estimated to be roughly $20.5 million per school.

“It allows schools to prioritize the revenue-sharing model to revenue-generating sports disproportionately; that’s obviously going to entrench inequality,” Lavery said. “These elite programs are going to continue to attract more talent. It’s going to make it effectively impossible for smaller schools to compete, at least in the big sports.”

Plaintiffs are also represented by Winston & Strawn LLP and Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP. The NCAA is represented by Wilkinson Stekloff LLP.

The case is In re College Athlete NIL Litig., N.D. Cal., No. 4:20-cv-03919, 6/6/25.



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Purdue basketball coach Matt Painter on NCAA settlement, paying players

Purdue basketball coach Matt Painter on Boilers’ 2025-26 season Purdue conducted its first practice on Monday ahead of the upcoming season. Hear what coach Matt Painter said afterwards. Purdue coach Matt Painter used a comparison to professional sports when explaining the difference between revenue-sharing and name, image and likeness. WEST LAFAYETTE — The financial allotment […]

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  • Purdue coach Matt Painter used a comparison to professional sports when explaining the difference between revenue-sharing and name, image and likeness.

WEST LAFAYETTE — The financial allotment for college athletes went from one extreme (legally nonexistent) to another when the NCAA instituted name, image, and likeness (NIL), allowing student-athletes to capitalize on their marketability.

The rich, essentially, got richer.

On Friday, a nearly half decade battle through the court system concluded with the House vs. NCAA settlement which will allow schools to pay their athletes directly.

Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski stated previously Purdue would be a full participant up to the cap limit, estimated at $20.5 million.

After Purdue basketball had its first summer practice on Monday, coach Matt Painter, who currently serves as third vice president on the National Association of Basketball Coaches board of directors, was asked if college basketball got better based on the ruling.

“Some competitive balance is all we really want,” Painter said. “It wasn’t name, image and likeness before. This gives you more of a grasp of having a core amount of money to pay these guys, which is a lot less than the money that’s going on right now. And then, anything on top of it is real name, image and likeness.”

The idea behind name, image, and likeness was for college athletes to capitalize on their notoriety via avenues such as autograph signings, hosting sports camps, or appearing in advertisements, for example.

Painter mentioned specifically from his own program since NIL went into effect the names of two-time National Player of the Year Zach Edey, selected ninth overall in last year’s NBA draft, and Braden Smith, the reigning Big Ten Player of the Year and Bob Cousy Award winner for the nation’s top point guard, as marketable athletes who fit the supposed NIL idea.

“When everybody gets money, not everybody in Major League Baseball gets money in name, image and likeness and they’re in the big show,” Painter said. “If you watch a baseball game and there’s 52 guys on two rosters, tell me how many guys are on those commercials. Two? Three? Four? Five? Not very many. That’s the market. Not everybody is marketable that plays college basketball and gets paid. …

“There’s a lot of things that haven’t been fair across the board, so hopefully this equals things out a little bit.”

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Colorado’s Deion Sanders reportedly away from program to deal with illness

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders has been sidelined recently as he deals with an unknown illness, USA Today and ESPN reported. Sanders is away from Colorado’s program and has been resting, his son, Deion Jr., shared in a YouTube video. “He’ll tell y’all soon enough what he’s going through, what he went through,” the younger […]

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Colorado football coach Deion Sanders has been sidelined recently as he deals with an unknown illness, USA Today and ESPN reported. Sanders is away from Colorado’s program and has been resting, his son, Deion Jr., shared in a YouTube video.

“He’ll tell y’all soon enough what he’s going through, what he went through,” the younger Sanders said, according to USA Today. “When we get back to Boulder, I don’t know. I’m waiting until my dad leaves. When he leaves, then I’ll go. Until then, I’m going to sit here with him.”

While Colorado isn’t practicing at the moment due to summer break, it’s been hosting its annual football camps in Boulder over the first two weeks of June. Sanders reportedly hasn’t been present for those camps this summer after appearing at them in his first two years on the job. Operating the summer camps is part of Sanders’ job description at Colorado, according to USA Today. 

The 57-year-old Sanders also recently canceled a speaking engagement at the Sickle Cell Disease Research and Educational Symposium.

“Due to an unavoidable last-minute scheduling change, our originally scheduled Foundation Keynote Speaker, Deion Sanders ‘Coach Prime,’ is unable to attend,” the organization wrote in a social media post. “We are grateful for his support and look forward to future opportunities to welcome him.”

Sanders hinted that he had been dealing with a health issue when he appeared on former NFL cornerback Asante Samuel’s podcast in May. As Samuel wished Sanders well, the Colorado coach said what he was “dealing with right now is at whole nother level” and that he had lost 14 pounds. Still, Sanders said he planned to return to coaching whenever the illness subsided.

Sanders has dealt with multiple serious health issues over the last few years. In 2021, he had two toes on his left foot amputated due to blood clots that stemmed from a previous surgery. He underwent surgery again to help relieve blood clots in both of his legs in 2023.

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NCAA says online abuse related to sports betting declined during this year’s March Madness :: WRALSportsFan.com

By The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS — INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Online abuse related to sports betting decreased during the NCAA’s March Madness basketball tournaments compared with the prior year, but people involved in the competition still received more than 3,000 threatening messages, the NCAA said Tuesday. The NCAA hired Signify Group to monitor messages directed at […]

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— INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Online abuse related to sports betting decreased during the NCAA’s March Madness basketball tournaments compared with the prior year, but people involved in the competition still received more than 3,000 threatening messages, the NCAA said Tuesday.

The NCAA hired Signify Group to monitor messages directed at athletes, coaches, game officials, selection committee members and others with official roles in the tournament. Signify used both artificial intelligence and human analysts to confirm the threats and, when necessary, report them to law enforcement.

Overall, abuse related to sports betting was down 23%, the NCAA said in a news release.

The men’s March Madness bracket was notable this year for the scarcity of upsets, with all four No. 1 seeds advancing to the Final Four and Florida, a popular pick to win it all, claiming the national title. On the women’s side, three top seeds made the national semifinals and No. 2 seed UConn, among the pre-tournament favorites, won the championship.

The NCAA’s analysis found that overall, abusive statements directed at people involved in the men’s tournament increased by 140% — much of it directed at the selection committee and coaches — while abuse related to sports betting was down 36%.

Abuse was down 83% on the women’s side and betting-related abuse declined 66%.

One women’s player who was targeted online was Chandler Prater of Mississippi State, who was guarding Southern California star JuJu Watkins when she suffered a season-ending knee injury.

“I received all kinds of messages, so many of them hateful and abusive,” Prater said in a statement. “It was unlike anything I’d ever experienced before.”

Signify’s AI flagged more than 54,000 posts, and its human analysts confirmed that 3,161 messages were abusive or threatening, the NCAA said. Those messages were reported to social media platforms and occasionally to law enforcement. The reporting led to the removal of abusive posts and restrictions on social media accounts.

NCAA President Charlie Baker said he has made curbing online harassment a top priority.

“We have been encouraged to record a reduction in sports betting-related abuse and threat at the 2025 event,” Signify CEO Jonathan Hirshler said, “as this is often the trigger for the most egregious and threatening content we detect.”

___

AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball



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House Fallout: Lawmakers Present Two Different Bills To Regulate College Sports

Can lawmakers agree on a bill that would help regulate college athletics after House settlement PublishedJune 10, 2025 5:32 PM EDT•UpdatedJune 10, 2025 5:32 PM EDT Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Are lawmakers ready to come together for a Bi-Partisan bill that would protect college sports in the aftermath of the House settlement? In the […]

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Can lawmakers agree on a bill that would help regulate college athletics after House settlement

Are lawmakers ready to come together for a Bi-Partisan bill that would protect college sports in the aftermath of the House settlement? In the upcoming ‘College Sports Act’ that is set to be presented this week, commissioners from the Power Five conferences have also voiced their support for this new legislation that could wrangle some of the biggest issues that are of concern moving forward. 

On Tuesday, two different bills were introduced by lawmakers that are aiming to address some of the problems that have plagued college sports over the past few years, especially the NCAA. 

Over the past few years, there has been a massive push from athletic directors and commissioners to have Congress intervene and adopt a bill that could give them some type of protection in this growing age of college athletics. 

U.S. Representatives Lisa McClain (R-Mich.)and Janelle Bynum (D-Ore.) introduced the new bill that is now making the rounds. At the same time, Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R., Fla) and Rep. Brett Guthrie (R., K.Y.) presented a discussion draft for an NIL bill that is being called the SCORE act. 

In the first mentioned bipartisan legislation, the following points were laid out for discussion. 

  • NIL Rights: Codifies the right of college athletes to receive compensation for their name, image, and likeness. Prohibits the NCAA and schools from penalizing student-athletes for NIL activity.
  • Extended Academic Access: Allows student-athletes to use their scholarships to complete a degree within 10 years, even if they leave school early.
  • Health & Life Skills Education: Requires Division I, II, and III schools participating in a Division I sport to provide training on mental health, sexual violence prevention, nutrition, career preparation, NIL education, and more.
  • Medical Protections: Requires schools to cover the medical costs of sports-related injuries for at least two years after the athlete leaves the institution.
  • Scholarship Security: Prohibits schools from canceling or reducing scholarships based on athletic performance, injury, or roster management.
  • Agent Oversight: Establishes agent registration and disclosure requirements to protect athletes from exploitation.
  • Employment Status: Prohibits student-athletes from being classified as employees of their university, preserving the collegiate nonprofessional model.
  • Federal Preemption: Creates a single national standard, overriding inconsistent state laws to ensure clarity for athletes, schools, and sponsors.

‘SCORE’ Act Draft Has The Vote Of Power-Five Commissioners

While there is one bill that was introduced, the ‘Autonomy Conferences’ praised a discussion draft that has been making the rounds on Tuesday as well. 

In what is being called the ‘SCORE Act’, leaders from the Big Ten, ACC, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC released a statement on Tuesday morning that praised what could potentially be coming down the pipeline over the next few days. 

The House of Representatives’ Committee on Energy and Commerce is scheduled to broach this topic during a hearing scheduled for Thursday. The key talking points of the draft were highlighted by the statement released by Power-Five commissioners on Tuesday. 

  • Replacing the confusing patchwork of state NIL laws with a national standard ensuring all student-athletes are treated fairly, no matter where they play.
  • Affirming student-athletes’ right to profit from their name, image and likeness.
  • Requiring academic support and ensuring access to mental health and well-being resources for student-athletes.
  • Prohibiting student-athletes from being considered employees of an institution, conference, or athletic association.
  • Protecting rules that serve the educational mission of college

What does all of this mean? This is simply a way for the conferences and House settlement ‘College Sports Commission’ to set guardrails around college athletics. A push to have some sort of federal legislation has been the main point of emphasis, ramping up again recently as the House settlement was approved. 

“This discussion draft comes at a time of historic transition for college athletics,” the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC said in a joint statement on Tuesday morning. “In the absence of federal standards, student-athletes and schools have been forced to navigate a fractured regulatory framework for too long. 

“Following the historic House settlement, this draft legislation represents a very encouraging step toward delivering the national clarity and accountability that college athletics desperately needs. We urge lawmakers to build on this momentum and deliver the national solution that athletes, coaches, and schools deserve.”

Will we finally see Congress pass some sort of bill that would satisfy all parties involved? That’s still up for debate, and congressional leaders will meet on Thursday to continue discussing the latest bills that have been presented. 

No matter what, it doesn’t sound like college commissioners are going to stop their lobbying for federal legislation on how to fix college athletics. 





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Coach challenges coming to college basketball in 2025-26, other rule changes approved – The Daily Hoosier

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Tuesday approved changes they say will help enhance the flow of the game in men’s basketball for the 2025-26 season. Changes include a coach’s challenge at any point in a game to review out-of-bounds calls, basket interference/goaltending and whether a secondary defender was in the restricted-area arc. The […]

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The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Tuesday approved changes they say will help enhance the flow of the game in men’s basketball for the 2025-26 season.

Changes include a coach’s challenge at any point in a game to review out-of-bounds calls, basket interference/goaltending and whether a secondary defender was in the restricted-area arc. The panel also approved modifications to the rule on continuous motion on field goal attempts.

Other enhancements to help with the flow of the game focus on the points of emphasis for officials for 2025-26. These will include directives to address delay-of-game tactics, limit time spent at the monitor, improve game administration efficiency and reduce physicality.

Under the coach’s challenge rule, teams must have a timeout to request an instant replay review challenge.

If the instant replay review challenge is successful, teams will be allowed to have one additional video review challenge for the rest of the game, including overtime.

If the first video review challenge is unsuccessful, the team loses the ability to challenge the rest of the game.

Officials can initiate video reviews on basket interference/goaltending and restricted arc plays in the last two minutes of the game and into overtime. Recent data shows these reviews caused minimal game interruptions. NCAA Men’s Basketball Rules Committee members think the coach’s challenge will have a significant impact on the flow of the game. Officials cannot conduct video review on out-of-bounds calls unless through a coach’s challenge.

The coach’s challenge, however, does not impact the NCAA officials’ voluntary use of instant replay for timing mistakes, scoring errors, shot clock violations, 2-point versus 3-point field goal attempts, flagrant fouls, etc.

In considering the decisions last month, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee had conversations about ways to continue this direction in the upcoming years, which includes positive momentum for moving the men’s game from halves to quarters. The committee realizes there are hurdles to implementing the quarter format to the game, including the structuring of media timeouts to accommodate commercial inventory.

The committee recommended NCAA Division I conferences create a joint working group to provide feedback on the potential change from halves to quarters.

The Men’s Basketball Rules Committee would like to have feedback from the conferences by the next rules-change year.

Under the changes to the continuous motion rule, an offensive player who ends his dribble going toward the basket and absorbs contact from the defense will be permitted to pivot or complete the step the player is on and finish the field goal attempt.

Currently, players are credited with field goals only when they are fouled while shooting the basketball.

Other rule changes:
– Officials will have the option to call a Flagrant 1 foul when a player is contacted to the groin. A Flagrant 1 foul results in two free throws for the offended team and possession of the ball. Previously, officials could only call a common foul or deem it a Flagrant 2 foul, in which the player receives an ejection, and the offended team receives two free throws and possession of the ball.
– If a player uses the rim to gain an advantage, it will be a basket interference violation.
– If one of the shot clocks becomes inoperable, the shot clock at the other basket will remain on. Previously, both clocks would be shut off until both are operable.

Coach’s Challenge coming to women’s game also

A coach’s video review challenge in women’s basketball was also approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Tuesday.

After a thorough discussion last month, the NCAA Women’s Basketball Rules Committee voted to recommend the change for the 2025-26 season.

Under the rule change, the following plays can be challenged at any point during the game:

  • Ruled out-of-bounds violations.
  • Ruled backcourt violations.
  • Whether a change in team possession occurred before the ruling of a foul where free throws would be involved.
  • Whether a foul was assessed to the correct player.

Officials cannot initiate reviews on these calls, with the exception of whether a foul was assessed to the correct player.

Teams will not be required to have a timeout to make a video review challenge in NCAA women’s basketball competition. However, a failed challenge will result in a technical foul for an excessive timeout.

The panel also approved an experimental rule in exhibition games for the 2025-26 season to allow coaches to make video review challenges on a foul charged to their team at any time during the game.

Other rules changes:

  • Setting the shot clock to 20 seconds when, following a dead ball, the offense is awarded the ball in its frontcourt.
  • Eliminating the rule that jerseys need to be tucked in.
  • Using excessive timeouts or playing with six players when the ball becomes live will become team technical fouls. These violations will count toward team fouls, and the team will be awarded possession at half-court following the free throws.
  • Allowing players to complete a jump stop when their feet land approximately at the same time. This will be a legal move and will not be considered a travel. The NCAA Women’s Basketball Rules Committee thinks this change can increase the accuracy on traveling rulings.
  • Allowing defenders multiple one-hand (hot stove) touches on stationary players holding the ball or on a dribbler. These touches would be legal as long as they are not repetitive and do not affect the rhythm, speed, balance and quickness of the dribbler or reroute the offensive player.
  • If a player competes in a game that the player should have missed due to a suspension, the player and the head coach will both have to serve a one-game suspension for the next scheduled game.

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