The regular signing period for Division I football recruits began Wednesday, but the University of Utah was not expected to make any significant moves.
That doesn’t come as a surprise given the Utes inked 18 recruits at the start of the early signing period in December, then hit the NCAA Transfer Portal for four players at positions of need, two at quarterback and two more at running back.
If spring practice occurs, the four transfers, quarterbacks Charlie Brewer (Baylor) and Ja’Quinden Jackson (Texas), and running backs T.J. Pledger (Oklahoma) and Chris Curry (LSU), will all participate, but beyond that, there is some question as to whether or not they will be eligible to play this fall.
As a graduate transfer, Brewer is immediately eligible under NCAA transfer guidelines. As underclassmen, Jackson (true freshman eligibility in 2021), Pledger (true junior) and Curry (redshirt sophomore) are not.
To that point, the NCAA Division I Council on Jan. 11 tabled legislation that would have allowed for a one-time transfer for student-athletes in baseball, basketball, football and men’s ice hockey. In layman’s terms, the legislation would allow student-athletes in those five sports to transfer one time without the usual penalty of taking a redshirt before being eligible. There are transfer exemption waivers in some cases in some sports, but those are never a certainty for incoming transfers.
Three days after the Division I Council tabled the matter, the Division I Board of Directors followed suit, and here we are.
“We’re hearing it will absolutely go through, it’s just a matter of when,” Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham told The Salt Lake Tribune. “Anything’s possible, but we’re assuming it’s going to pass.”
“I’m frustrated because I believe transferring for students in those five sports without sitting a year should be allowed,” Utah athletic director Mark Harlan told The Tribune, while also voicing his displeasure at the fact that legislation regarding name, image and likeness (NIL) was also tabled on Jan. 11.
Harlan was frustrated, but also came off as optimistic that something could still get done, it just may take longer than everyone wanted after the Division I Council introduced the proposal in October.
Whittingham’s assertion that the one-time transfer policy will get done is not unreasonable, mostly because time remains on his side.
Had the Division I Council voted the transfer legislation through, the Division I Board of Directors surely would have rubber-stamped it. In that case, the new rule would have taken effect Aug. 1, 27 days before the first week of games on the FBS schedule, and 32 days before Utah is scheduled to open its season vs. Weber State at Rice-Eccles Stadium.
Multiple Pac-12 sources have echoed Whittingham in recent weeks, that the net result is expected to be that the one-time transfer is not only enacted, but enacted in time for the 2021 season, in which case Jackson, Pledger, and Curry are eligible.
Maybe that happens, maybe not, but for now, all Utah can do is wait and see.
This story will be updated.