Tyler Shough needed seven years of college football to become a starting NFL quarterback.
Under the approved Tuesday, athletes will no longer have that option.
Athletes in Division I, the top level of competition, will have of competition, a move the NCAA hopes will add structure to a system stretched into chaos and courtrooms by countless transfers, redshirt decisions, injuries, players seeking more seasons to cash in on NIL opportunities and even pandemic-era complexities.
The eligibility clock starts when an athlete enrolls full time or at the beginning of the academic year following their 19th birthday, whichever occurs first.
If the new rules withstand potential legal challenges, the development of college athletes will undergo a dramatic shift. There will be no more traditional redshirt years, nor will there be medical or general extension waivers available; the only limited exceptions for going beyond five-in-five would be for military service, religious missions and maternity leave.
Tom Loy, a national recruiting analyst for 247Sports, said he believes the change could keep talented players in college for longer.
鈥淚n addition, I believe this rule change would have coaches putting a significant emphasis on retaining as much of the current roster as possible, especially upperclassmen, while focusing their attention slightly less on the transfer portal,鈥 Loy said in an email. 鈥淲ith the opportunity to play five full seasons, they could have a roster full of 23-year-olds, for example, compared to 18- or 19-year-olds, and beyond that, potentially have a group full of talent they have developed in their system.鈥
The end of the redshirt
Shough spent two seasons at Oregon and three at Texas Tech before suiting up at Louisville as a seventh-year senior in 2024. Injuries, a redshirt season and the pandemic extended his college career, extra time that helped turn him into a and, eventually, the starting quarterback for the New Orleans Saints.
He believes future college athletes should be given the same opportunities.
鈥淚 think everybody should have a chance to at least get a medical and then a redshirt,鈥 Shough said. 鈥淚 know I benefited from that experience, the maturation process, having to compete multiple years. I feel strongly about that.鈥
Detroit Lions rookie defensive lineman Aidan Keanaaina followed a similar path. His six-year college career included an undergraduate stint at Notre Dame and two postgraduate seasons at California following a medical redshirt and pandemic waiver, when the NCAA gave an extra year.
The would have taken away his final college season in 2025, a year that helped him make his case to NFL scouts. Even so, he understands the effort to bring order to a landscape he described as the wild West.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 please everyone in this world, ever, but they鈥檙e trying to please as many people as they can and do right by as many people as possible,鈥 said Keanaaina, an undrafted free agent. 鈥淎s someone who was injured, I think it鈥檚 tough to make a one-size-fits-all rule. But I also get that sometimes an older player is taking opportunities away from a younger one.鈥
It could change recruiting or have other ripple effects
While Shough and Keanaaina point to what the new model could eliminate, others believe opportunities will be created elsewhere in college sports.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 the NCAA鈥檚 way of keeping college sports as amateur as possible with the chaos that is the NIL era. It will be good for sports like lacrosse where post-grad and redshirt years are less common than in football,鈥 said Kelsey Fee, an assistant women鈥檚 lacrosse coach at Dartmouth. 鈥淚t will open up the portal to a new slew of craziness with kids looking to use their fifth year.鈥
Fee said she also thinks the shift will bring an excitement to recruiting that hasn鈥檛 been felt in recent years. Loy, the recruiting analyst, said coaches could be more interested in high school prospects 鈥渁nd getting these guys on the field as quickly as possible.鈥
鈥淲hether it works out or not, everyone would get a glimpse at where each prospect stands compared to others,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淭he players would get the early playing time, the coaches would see who outperforms who, and then, without the ability to redshirt anyone, a prospect can continue to be developed if they want to stick around and compete. They also wouldn鈥檛 just rush to leave and transfer, since they know they have five years to play ball.鈥
Green Bay Packers center and 2022 third-rounder Sean Rhyan predicted stricter eligibility guidelines could change the way athletes think about transferring: Once the clock starts ticking, a case can no longer be made to rectify a misstep.
鈥淔ive for five, that鈥檚 fair. I think NIL is good, but I also think it took away that loyalty aspect that I think sports need,鈥 Rhyan said. 鈥淗aving that fixed amount of time is going to bring that loyalty.鈥
And then Rhyan added perhaps the most convincing argument of all: 鈥淗aving like a 27-year-old linebacker or something and then you have a 17-year-old running back … I think five for five is more than fair.鈥
鈥斺赌
AP Sports Writers Larry Lage, Steve Megargee and Brett Martel contributed to this report.
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