Published • loading... • Updated
NCAA's Eligibility Proposal Could Blow up College Hockey
The proposal would give Division I athletes five years to compete after high school graduation or age 19, with exceptions for some cases.
- On Monday, the NCAA Division I Board of Directors directed the Division I Cabinet to advance a proposal granting student-athletes five years of eligibility while eliminating redshirts and hardship waivers entirely.
- Under the current system, athletes receive five years to complete four seasons of eligibility. The proposed model simplifies this by starting the five-year clock after high school graduation or an athlete's 19th birthday, whichever comes first.
- New regulations will not retroactively apply to student-athletes whose eligibility is completed by spring 2026, the NCAA stated Monday. The proposal also includes degree-completion funding for up to 10 years after eligibility expires.
- NCHC commissioner Heather Weems expressed "significant concerns" about the proposal's impact on hockey, warning the policy could render many prospective athletes "collateral damage" without intentional implementation consideration.
- The Division I Cabinet meets May 22 to advance the initiative, which considers potential exceptions for military service or pregnancy to provide athletes a stable baseline for future planning.
Insights by Ground AI
12 Articles
12 Articles
Optimistic Baker: New age rules not retroactive
NCAA president Charlie Baker, who is "pretty optimistic" the age-based eligibility proposal will pass, told ESPN that the implementation is not expected to include athletes who graduated or exhausted their eligibility in the 2025-26 season.
·United States
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources12
Leaning Left2Leaning Right0Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution71% Center
Bias Distribution
- 71% of the sources are Center
71% Center
L 29%
C 71%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium








