There’s never been a better time to be an NCAA athlete.
The transfer portal gives them the freedom to change schools like any regular student could come and go and have immediate eligibility in doing so.
The passage of name, image and likeness legislation allows them to make money without fear of losing eligibility or being suspended.
And the newest proposal by the NCAA Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports (CSMAS) just might take cannabis off the NCAA’s banned drug list and keep testing protocols focused on performance enhancing drugs. The CSMAS also recommended the NCAA, which has conducted drug tests at its championship events since 1986, stop testing at said events until the matter is voted upon.
It’s far from a done deal. All three NCAA divisions would have to propose and pass legislation for it to be official. What it does signal is another reason why the NCAA needs to fully embrace being an organization for its athletes.
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That’s especially true during this phase of conference realignment that will have UCLA flying across the country to play Rutgers in a Big Ten conference game when it joins the league in 2024.
Last December, the NCAA held a summit called Cannabinoids in College Athletics that covered a variety of topics centered around marijuana…
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