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    Home»Featured»DeJuan Clayton Beat the NCAA for the Right to Play Basketball
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    DeJuan Clayton Beat the NCAA for the Right to Play Basketball

    By FirstandPenFebruary 28, 202403 Mins Read
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    The NCAA has long maintained a stranglehold over college athletes, oftentimes preventing them from participating in athletics while they were trying to deal with challenging life situations.

    We’ve witnessed it through situations involving student-athletes such as Jeremy Bloom, who was forced to choose between playing football for Colorado or representing the U.S. at the Winter Olympics. We’ve seen it with players who were penalized for, or prevented from trying to transfer without delay while coaches could leave with no harm or limitation.

    On Friday, DeJuan Clayton became one of the lucky ones to challenge and defeat the NCAA.

    Clayton began his college career in 2016 at Coppin State University in Baltimore. Unfortunately, injuries hampered his time there and he missed numerous games. His fifth season began during the Pandemic, which ultimately didn’t count toward athlete eligibility limits. He then graduated, moved to Connecticut and enrolled at the University of Hartford, where he pursued his next degree and suffered a shoulder injury that limited him to only two games.

    He then headed west to the University of California-Berkeley, where things got even uglier.

    In a story written by the Riverdale Press, Clayton’s attorney, Diana Florence, noted in a lawsuit that Clayton suffered hamstring injuries and was “forced to endure harsh and egregious treatment of the Cal coaching staff, while simultaneously enduring other well-documented physical and mental health issues.”

    Among other things, Florence claimed that the school made him pay for his plane ticket to the West Coast, didn’t provide him with housing or financial assistance and “pressured” him into returning to play before finishing rehab.

    “He didn’t have any stipends,” Florence said to the Press. “He was forced to work, and also do a Division I practice schedule.”

    That season, in 2022, Clayton played in nine games for Cal, the last being in February 2023. That’s one less game than the 10-game maximum where athletes can earn a medical waiver from the NCAA to remain eligible.

    Yet the NCAA denied him the waiver.

    Clayton was in NCAA purgatory, waiting for any chance that would allow him to pursue his next opportunity. That movement arrived in December 2023 when U.S. District Judge John Preston Bailey in West Virginia ruled against the NCAA’s two-time transfer rule that required athletes to sit out a year.

    So he transferred to Manhattan College in the hopes of playing out his eighth year of eligibility, the chances of which looked very dim.

    But this past Friday at 7:48 pm, Clayton received a lifeline from New York Supreme Court Justice Kim Adir Wilson in the Bronx, who granted an injunction in his case against the NCAA.

    Continue reading over at First and Pen.

    Black athletes DeJuan Clayton First and Pen NCAA Thehub.news
    FirstandPen

    "First And Pen” was created to inform, inspire and connect through voices of color in sports, and is the sports media vertical of The Khanate Group. Our Mission: “We are first to the field and last to leave it, amplifying local sports stories from voices of color to the national conscience.”

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    For Many Homeowners of Color, the Eaton Fire Recovery Is Still Out of Reach

    By Veronika Lleshi

    The Sweet and Sour History of Watermelon

    By Cuisine Noir

    This Day in History: October 10th

    By TheHub.news Staff

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