NCAA, College football
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The North Carolina Central Eagles (4-2) take on the Florida A&M Rattlers (1-3) at Ken Riley Field at Bragg Memorial Stadium on Saturday afternoon.
The NCAA approved a single January transfer window in college football on Wednesday, a move that will allow coaches with high-stakes postseason games to focus more on matchups than player retention.
The NCAA moved a step closer Wednesday to allowing athletes and athletic department staff members to bet on professional sports. The Division I Administrative Committee approved the change, which must still be approved by Division II and III for it to go into effect. If approved by all three divisions, it would go into effect Nov. 1.
The No. 5-ranked Montana State Bobcats (4-2) go for their fifth straight win on Saturday afternoon when they host the Idaho State Bengals (2-4).
14hon MSN
SEC’s Greg Sankey rejects pooling conference TV rights as a solution to problems in college sports
A bill in Congress co-sponsored by Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., calls for a rewrite of the 1961 Sports Broadcasting Act, which forbids the conferences from combining their TV rights. Campbell supports that element of Cantwell’s recently introduced SAFE Act.
The NCAA has approved a new one-time-only college football transfer portal window from January 2–16 for the 2025-26 season.
An NCAA panel voted to ease pro sports betting restrictions for college athletes. The Division II and III committees are expected to vote on the issue in late October.
The NCAA banned three Division I college basketball players by permanently revoking their eligibility on Wednesday, saying they had bet on their own games at Fresno State and San Jose State and were able to share thousands of dollars in payouts.