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NCAA proposal would loosen protocol for conferences needing 5-7 teams to fill out bowl agreements

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Division I Football Bowl Subdivisions Oversight Committee has adopted a proposal that would loosen the constraints on conferences needing one or more of its 5-7 teams to play in bowl games.

Under the proposal, voted on Thursday, if all teams with at least a 6-6 record have been selected, a conference can pick any team that has a minimum multiyear Academic Progress Rate score of 930 to fill its bowl commitments.

The committee’s action is not final until the Division I Cabinet reviews it in June.

Currently, if 5-7 teams need to be selected for a bowl, those teams become available in descending order of their multiyear Academic Progress Rate.

There was a scramble for 5-7 teams to fill open bowl spots last year when Iowa State, Kansas State and Notre Dame announced on bowl selection day that they would opt out. Mississippi State, Rice and Appalachian State accepted bowl bids with 5-7 records, but at least six 5-7 teams declined bids before matchups were finalized.

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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

College Sports Commission wins key NIL arbitration in case brought by Nebraska football players

An arbitrator ruled in favor of the College Sports Commission on Monday in a case brought on behalf of Nebraska football players that is viewed as a key test for the new entity in charge of approving third-party name-image-likeness deals in college sports. The CSC in a statement said the arbitrator affirmed the commission's decision to reject third-party NIL agreements between Nebraska's multimedia rights (MMR) partner, Playfly, and the players. At issue was whether Nebraska's MMR partner would be considered an “associated entity" — deals from which are subject to CSC scrutiny. With that decided, the CSC said the arbitrator rejected the deals because:
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