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President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order to regulate college sports in the near future, sources tell On3. The order is expected to encompass transfer movement, player eligibility, funding requirements for women and Olympic sports and reins in NIL collectives.
The order threatens to review federal government grants and contracts for colleges and universities that don’t comply with NCAA rules. Specifically, athletes will be given one “free” transfer as an undergraduate and again as a graduate, sources briefed in the matter told On3.
Multiple provisions of the executive order address areas that federal and district courts have previously ruled on. However, it creates a situation where NCAA members will have to follow Trump’s order or ignore previous judicial decisions.
Executive orders can be legally challenged. Courts have struck down several of Trump’s orders in recent months. Trump previously predicted that the order would be challenged in the courts. A key sticking point will be whether the president has legal authority over NCAA eligibility rules.
The release of the executive order comes a month after Trump gathered college sports leaders at the White House for a roundtable. The group discussed pushing forward the SCORE Act and similar Congressional legislation, but the president was emphatic that an executive order would also be drafted.
“So I’m going to sit down, and I’m going to write an executive order based on many of the sentiments made, many of the sentiments I’ve been hearing over the last year about what a disaster this is for colleges, the players, the families, ruining families, ruining everything,” Trump said in early March.
The new transfer guidelines are expected to cause havoc. Currently, athletes can transfer as many times as they want, as long as they are academically eligible. The change was made in 2024 following a West Virginia judge’s ruling in 2023 that intended to stop the organization from enforcing its bylaw barring athletes from transferring multiple times and playing right away.
The men’s and women’s basketball transfer portal opens next week, and hundreds of athletes who have already transferred before have made plans to re-enter the portal.
“It’s terrible for the schools, do they ignore the presidential order or a court order? Coaches are going to be pissed,” said Darren Heitner, who added he’s expecting to represent multiple athletes in suing the NCAA and schools over new transfer restrictions.
Other critical pieces in the order include defining the length of collegiate eligibility. In courtrooms across the nation in recent years, players with expiring eligibility have filed lawsuits against the NCAA
In March’s roundtable, Trump highlighted his desire for the order to require schools to fund women’s and Olympic sports.
In recent weeks, Trump formed five college sports committees covering legislation, rules, NCAA reform, media and player issues, with meetings being held. The President’s Oversight Committee collected the groups’ recommendations and made final calls.
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