Soccer

NCAA Cabinet Overhauls Men’s Soccer Calendar and Eligibility Rules

Key reforms include a two‑semester season trial, a standardized 14‑week FBS schedule and stricter bowl criteria

The NCAA Division I Cabinet has taken decisive action on several governance items affecting men's soccer and the Football Bowl Subdivision, remanding a contentious proposal to shift the soccer calendar while simultaneously adopting a suite of new scheduling and eligibility measures.

Season restructuring proposal

The Men's Soccer Oversight Committee had suggested moving the sport to a two‑semester format to modernize its calendar and spur growth, a notion that earned broad backing from student‑athletes but met resistance from 20 Division I conferences wary of season length and rule clarity; the Cabinet asked the committee to revisit the idea and address the academic implications highlighted by member schools.

New FBS schedule

In a separate move, the Cabinet standardized the FBS regular season to 14 weeks beginning in the fall of 2027, concluding the schedule the week after Thanksgiving and allowing teams to play up to 12 regular‑season games.

Bowl eligibility reforms

The Cabinet also approved revised bowl eligibility rules, including a minimum 930 Academic Progress Rate for teams reclassifying from FCS to FBS and new provisions for programs transitioning between divisions.

Discussions turned to tampering concerns, recruiting of prospective transfers and the fees charged by agents, prompting the Board to direct staff to craft an engagement period that would permit permissible communications before each Transfer Portal window opens.

Looking ahead

Staff have been tasked with refining these proposals and presenting them at upcoming meetings, ensuring that the sport’s competitive and academic priorities move forward in tandem.

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