Schools Expected To Be Given Option To Grandfather In Roster Limits In House Settlement

After some confusion, attorneys in the NCAA v. House case are expected to file a revision to the settlement that will grant schools the ability to grandfather in roster limits.

The revision, which is expected to be filed on Wednesday night, comes after Judge Claudia Wilken delayed final approval of the case over roster limits, calling on attorneys to add a grandfathering clause to roster limits “so that members of the Injunctive Relief Settlement Class will not be harmed by the immediate implementation of the roster limits provision.”

Initially, an Associated Press report seemed to indicate that roster spots would be found for only those who individually objected to the case, though that was cleared up on Tuesday by CBS Sports‘ Brandon Marcello.

It was later reported on Tuesday that House v. NCAA plaintiffs had requested grandfather protection for all athletes who lost spots because of roster limits. This will act as a safeguard for current student-athletes, allowing them to continue to operate under the old set of rules (with larger rosters) while they finish out their career.

Grandfathering in the roster limits will be an option for schools, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reports, noting that it will also permit athletes who leave their current school to keep their grandfather status at their new school.

Judge Wilken gave attorneys a May 7 deadline to submit a revision to the settlement addressing the roster limit situation, and the filing is expected tonight.

Once that is filed, the door is open for Judge Wilken to approve the settlement. At the final approval hearing in April, roster limits were the main sticking point for Wilken. She found no issue with the $20.5 million schools will be able to pay their athletes in NIL money and the $2.8 billion in back pay damages former athletes will receive.

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Frank Rizzo
2 days ago

Everyone gets a trophy and everyone gets a roster spot.

Swimster
3 days ago

Option? They will all obviously opt out. The judge will never go for this.

I float
3 days ago

Question: Now that 47 has created a presidential commission on college athletics, and has appointed Saban as the co chair, how would that impact Olympic and non revenue generating sports?

I recall that Saban was vastly against revenue sharing with students, and supposedly this is created to sort out the current mess, and to bring non revenue sports some parity.

So would swimming be better off or worse off under Saban’s commission?

Kenn
3 days ago

So….optional and up to the schools. Curious to see how many of the thousands of athletes that were cut get brought back. This case should not be signed by the judge as it is harming a large group within the settling group. With the outgoing money being forced by this case the colleges would not have cut these kids. And let’s remember that’s what they are….kids. Welcome to the real world kids. Where is USA swimming and the US Olympic committee in all of this, as the Olympic sports will be slaughtered here.

DrSwimPhil
Reply to  Kenn
3 days ago

Not signing it would completely blow everything up. Unfortunately signing the case is really the only true path to keeping some semblance of what we have for our sport.

Retail row
3 days ago

This is just like Fortnite. The players (swimmers) that got eliminated (cut) can get rebooted (grandfathered in) but if they left the lobby (transferred) then they can’t get back in the game. Crazy

Confused
3 days ago

This is all a mess! Kids that were cut and chose not to go into the portal will be the most affected. Some chose for academics as well! My kid will be affected by this! She’s so worried she will now be asked to come back! She said there is no way she can go back knowing her coach cut her and she didn’t need to… now she’s at risk for losing everything. You even wrote an article about my girl. We still don’t know what she’s going to be able to keep as a student athlete.

Swim Dad
Reply to  Confused
3 days ago

Great point and we’re in the exact same boat. They should be offered to be brought back and given full rides regardless of they come back out not until the completion of their swim careers. Shame on these conference commissioners and AD’s to allow these kids to be in this position. It’s despicable and really shows the lack of intelligence at these institutions. It has truly tainted my love and support for college athletics. Do you think the coaches want to invite kids back? No way. They love having less kids to coach. So you’re right, kids that opted to stay and not enter the portal will be the most affected.

DrSwimPhil
Reply to  Confused
3 days ago

Hold on, I’m confused with your confusion here…

First and foremost, I truly am sorry your daughter went through that. But…”she’s worried she will now be asked to come back”….what do you mean by this? The rest of your paragraph makes it known that she wasn’t happy with how it worked out and has found a way to handle that. Why is that a “worry” when she can just say “thanks, but no thanks, I know where I’m at and am happy”? Maybe I’m really misunderstanding all that’s happened here, but I think it’s pretty clear they can keep what they were owed regardless moving forward the rest of their time at the given university.

SheSwims
Reply to  Confused
3 days ago

I feel for you. Even though cut athletes were told that they get to keep their scholarships, there is so much more that they miss out on. Priority/Early registering for classes, food and dining perks, and so much more. It’s just a mess!

MigBike
3 days ago

Hrumpf, Hrurumpf go the pundits crackling about the why and why not about nothing to be changed except that roster limits are the wave of the future, NIL $ is for real in NCAA swimming and the sport is changing radically. All for the good! Too ALL – Please try to enjoy the ride!

Moopy
Reply to  MigBike
3 days ago

Change isn’t really the major issue it is the implementation of these changes. Allowing swimmers who were already on a roster to finish their degrees at the school who recruited and signed them should not even be an issue. It may shock you but not everyone goes to college just to swim…..some kids are there for a degree too.

MigBike
Reply to  Moopy
1 day ago

If the “kids” are there for a degree, they can stay at tat school JUST not swim. Life is a series of choices! Stop whining.

SEC's Folly
3 days ago

This should have been decided in December. Total mess. I am especially happy for the juniors moving to their senior year. I hope they get to finish out what they started now. For those that were cut and don’t go back, give them back their year. Special redshirts should be granted due to the NCAAs mess.

However, the next phase looks to just make things worse. There is no doubt that additional lawsuits are incoming. Unfortunately, I don’t see how this helps the future of swimming. If anything, it will just add to its destruction.

Last edited 3 days ago by SEC's Folly
D1 Parent
Reply to  SEC's Folly
3 days ago

First-hand experience here. How much should we be asking for in the initial lawsuit? Include the University and Head Coach?

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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