SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey has branded the NCAA’s tampering enforcement language as “archaic,” demanding a swift policy overhaul while rejecting calls to suspend investigations—a stance that crystallizes the growing rift between conference leaders and the Association’s struggling governance model.
At the SEC basketball tournament in Nashville, Commissioner Greg Sankey delivered a scathing assessment of the NCAA‘s approach to tampering, calling its regulatory language “archaic” and unfit for today’s college sports landscape dominated by NIL deals and the transfer portal.
Sankey’s comments, detailed by AP News, underscore the growing frustration with the NCAA’s outdated enforcement mechanisms. “We need clarity. Secondly, we need understanding on the part of policymakers of what’s actually happening,” he told reporters, highlighting the disconnect between decades-old rules and the modern era of athlete empowerment. “How’s this game being played? That doesn’t mean the NCAA should just stop. But the notion that a memo would be sent and that changes things when the NCAA is perceived as sitting on the sidelines, that’s not a workable solution.”
The tampering firestorm was ignited last month when Clemson coach Dabo Swinney publicly accused Mississippi coach Pete Golding of tampering with linebacker Luke Ferrelli, a player who transferred from Cal to Clemson before re-entering the portal and ultimately signing with Mississippi in a case reported by Associated Press.
In response, the NCAA announced via memo its intent to “pursue significant penalties” for violations, a stance that has split the power conferences. The Big Ten has urged a halt to tampering investigations, while the ACC and Big 12 have opposed such a pause as documented by AP News’ college football coverage.
Sankey aligned with the opponents of a moratorium, arguing that stopping investigations would damage the NCAA’s credibility. Yet, he joined other conference leaders in pressing NCAA President Charlie Baker for a rapid policy reset during White House meetings this week.
“They need a quick policy reset and they need to announce that with clarity,” Sankey said, signaling that the SEC expects concrete action, not just symbolic gestures.
This standoff exposes a fundamental crisis: the NCAA must quickly adapt its rules to the realities of NIL and the transfer portal or risk being bypassed by autonomous conferences. With billions in revenue and recruiting wars escalating, the outcome will determine the future structure of college sports.
Fans are particularly vocal on social media, debating how tampering violations might impact upcoming recruiting classes and whether the NCAA possesses the will to enforce its own rules in this new era. The pervasive uncertainty fuels skepticism about the Association’s effectiveness.
Sankey’s leadership on this issue indicates the SEC will not wait for the NCAA to act. Expect the conference to champion specific reforms, potentially setting a de facto national standard or further fracturing the governance landscape.
Ultimately, the NCAA faces a stark choice: modernize its enforcement framework to align with 2026 realities or cede control to the very conferences it aims to regulate.
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