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Ohio State Men's Tennis (2014/2019/2024 ITA Indoor National Champs, 17 Straight B1G Titles)

Singles:

#1 - Kingsley, Cannon

#2 - Tracy, JJ

#3 - Vocel, Matej

#4 - Van Emburgh, Jake

#5 - Trotter, James

#6 - Boulais, Justin

Slight change in the singles lineup today. Against scUM Cash was #5 and Trotter was #6.
 
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College Power-Brokers Poised to Turn NCAA Upside Down

Several athletic administrators and college sports insiders discussed the Transfer Committee’s concepts under the condition of anonymity. They include (1) eliminating scholarship caps on sports that offer only partial scholarships; (2) abolishing the limitation on the number of coaches per team; (3) expanding direct payments from schools to athletes; (4) reconfiguring the recruiting calendar; and (5) implementing closed periods in the NCAA transfer portal. At least the first three items will be left in the decision-making hands of individual conferences, if the concepts are approved.
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The expansion of scholarships would be a historic move, but it would not impact sports such as football and basketball, known as “head count” sports. They offer full scholarships to a roster of players: 85 in football and 15 in basketball. The concept pertains to sports offering partial scholarships, known as “equivalency” sports, such as baseball, hockey, track and field, and swimming. For example, the NCAA maximum scholarships allowed in baseball is 11.7 for a roster of 35—a figure often criticized by high-level baseball-playing schools from rich conferences that want to spend more. Under the transformation’s plan, a school could conceivably offer 35 full scholarships in the sport.

Entire article: https://www.si.com/college/2022/04/27/ncaa-new-transformation-committee-changes

eliminating scholarship caps on sports that offer only partial scholarships

Just sayin': Men's tennis is currently allowed only 4.5 scholarships, which is "divided up" among the entire Tennis team.

https://scholarshipstats.com/ncaalimits

If that ever passes, the conferences/school's willing to offer full scholarships for sports like tennis are going to have a real recruiting advantage.

Anyone know how much NIL money the "higher ranked" college tennis players are earning/getting?
 
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