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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

NCAA scrutinizes transfer regulations

Proposal to limit graduate transfers considered

Michael Marot Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS – Kevin Lennon is putting transfer rule changes near the top of his priority list.

The NCAA’s new vice president for Division I governance told the Associated Press there are growing concerns among the division’s 345 members over the surging number of students switching schools – and that the debate could come to a close sometime in the next year.

Some of the ideas bandied about would have a dramatic impact on graduate transfer students. The proposals include giving schools the ability to restrict where ex-players can go and requiring the athletes to sit out one year before becoming eligible. Undergrads already are required to sit out one year, but the current rules allow players with bachelor’s degrees to transfer to another school and become eligible immediately if they attend grad school.

“If you’re transferring to be in a graduate program, the NCAA wants you to be working in earnest toward that degree rather than just using up your last year of eligibility,” Lennon said during a 40-minute interview last week, noting there are no formal proposals yet.

Lennon has spent the past several weeks reaching out to school leaders and fine-tuning his vision for the future. The Harvard and Ohio University graduate replaced longtime NCAA executive David Berst on April 6 after Berst announced he would retire this summer.

One of the hottest topics is transfers. According to an NCAA report based on statistics from ESPN, 604 Division I men’s basketball players changed schools in 2014 compared with 455 in 2013.

Lennon said finding a consensus about potential solutions has been tricky.

“You have one line of thinking that says when a student has earned their undergraduate degree they’ve earned the right to go wherever they want without any kind of NCAA restrictions,” Lennon said. “I think, unfortunately, what the data has shown is that people are transferring and they are not completing their graduate degrees because the vast majority of those degrees are two years.”

Coaches from big and small schools are already jumping on board.

Belmont coach Rick Byrd, the basketball rules committee chairman, believes the transfer issue would clear up if players took more time to contemplate their college choices. Byrd has 711 career wins and said he hasn’t had a player leave his program in over a decade. Still, he supports the NCAA’s move to get rid of special waivers and agrees with the concept for grad students.

So does Kentucky’s John Calipari.

“You need two years in grad school anyway, so it makes sense,” Calipari said.

Eliminating waivers and making grad students sit out a year would “cut this thing by two-thirds,” he added.

With data showing transfers lose, on average, about nine months of academic credit, Lennon said concern among university leaders is high. The NCAA also is considering options to stem the tidal wave of transfers among undergrads, but nothing has worked.

“No one is happy with the transfer rate, particularly in the sport of men’s basketball,” Lennon said. “When 40 percent of your students are leaving after their second year, that’s a signal something’s wrong.”