Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap St. John's Chris Ledlum and Jordan Dingle suing NCAA for denying them 2024 !

St. John's Chris Ledlum and Jordan Dingle suing NCAA for denying them 2024

Time:2024-05-01 12:31:50 source:Earthly Echo news portal

NEW YORK (AP) — St. John’s basketball players Chris Ledlum and Jordan Dingle have filed a lawsuit against the NCAA for denying their request for an eligibility waiver that would give them one more season of competition with the Red Storm or another team.

The lawsuit, filed last Friday in Queens (New York) Supreme Court, contends the NCAA unfairly denied the players their fifth years of eligibility under the COVID-19 waiver granted to athletes whose 2019-20 seasons were disrupted by the pandemic.

Ledlum (Harvard) and Dingle (Penn) transferred to St. John’s from Ivy League schools before the 2023-24 season. The NCAA’s COVID-19 exemption essentially replaces the 2019-20 season, but Ledlum and Dingle also lost the 2020-21 season because the Ivy League opted to have no sports competition that academic year.

The players allege “inequitable application” of the COVID waiver and that the denial of an exemption for 2024-25 in their cases “cannot withstand analysis under the rule of reason.”

Related information
  • German dependency on Russian energy significantly reduced: president
  • Hainan takes lead in green auto sector
  • Children learned scientific knowledge with National Science Popularization Day approaching
  • Chinese commerce minister meets with WTO director
  • Centennial celebrations of Chapman's Peak Drive held in Cape Town
  • Economy on stable footing, experts say
  • Workers advanced carbon
  • 3D printing expo displays high
Recommended content
  • World Insights: Strong Mideast rapprochement signals changing regional order
  • A photovoltaic power station was built on the rooftop of a residential building in Zhengzhou
  • U.S. ports remain confident in China
  • Shanghai industry fair underlines green ways
  • Xinjiang's green electricity trading hits new high
  • Chinese carriers allowed to operate more flights to U.S.