In my opinion this is only the precursor event to the impending iceberg. All of these legal decisions effectively challenge the idea of "What is eligibility?". Where I see this going is that eventually the NCAA is going to be challenged in court to defend itself against 1. Why shouldn't everyone enrolled in college be allowed at least 4 years of NCAA eligibility? and 2. Why should participation in any other non-NCAA activities preclude anyone from having full NCAA eligibility? And in my opinion, once those 2 things are challenged in court, they will be fairly easy victories for whoever brings those cases, because legally how the NCAA is set up, those aren't all that legally defensible. As such I see the door eventually opening up to allow pro athletes who still have NCAA eligibility to come back so long as they enroll in college. I also would not be surprised if the term limit in eligibility is also completely smashed to pieces and would instead apply for all students actively enrolled in an NCAA university regardless of time spent. And at that point the NCAA just effectively becomes a new G League.Ah yes, the ol’ development league structure.
I, for one, cannot wait for every college football player to spend 2 non-counting years at JUCO, 2 years at a mid-major, and two years at a P4. Bunch of 23/24 year olds in the draft.