Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, was this news brought to you by the same twitter (sorry, "X") account that said there would be a major announcement on July 1 regarding birth/grade year stuff that never happened?
Here is a link to information from a major law firm about the settlement that would bring the roster caps about:
https://www.engage.hoganlovells.com/knowledgeservices/news/what-the-proposed-house-settlement-means-for-ncaa-division-i-institutions
And here’s a quote from the link:
“Specifically, the settlement eliminates NCAA caps on the number of scholarships per sport, and instead proposes the NCAA and conferences designate roster limits by sport. Under the settlement framework, institutions will be able to fully fund scholarships for every member of a team in a given sport, so long as the overall roster stays within the prescribed limits.”
This would benefit men's soccer bigtime.
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t new news. We were told this at a combine for a large D1 program two summers ago that the large roster sizes were because of COVID and were only through c/o 2024.
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t new news. We were told this at a combine for a large D1 program two summers ago that the large roster sizes were because of COVID and were only through c/o 2024.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's the difference if your kid is #30 or #40 on the team. Either way they're not seeing the field unless they beat out 30 players in front of them.
Why would you sign up for a team with over 30 roster spots. Why would you sign up with a team with over 18?
Because it's 40 in college and it's a way for your kid to get into a better school than they otherwise wood. That deep into the roster, these aren't scholarship players, so nothing lost there.
Were coaches being allowed to support that many athletes through admissions?
At schools like UNC and Stanford? Absolutely
lol no. Maybe at College of Charleston and Alcorn State.