The judge overseeing the rewriting of the college sports rulebook threw a potentially deal-wrecking roadblock into the mix Wednesday, insisting parties in the $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit redo the part of the proposed settlement involving roster limits that many schools are already putting in motion.
''Any disruption that may occur is a problem of Defendants' and NCAA members schools' own making,'' U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken wrote in a pointed five-page order in which she gave no weight to the argument that a reworking of the proposal could throw college sports into chaos.
She gave the sides 14 days to contact their mediator and return to the bargaining table.
The settlement in the landmark class-action lawsuit called for schools to no longer be bound by scholarship limits for their teams, but rather by roster limits in which everyone would be eligible for aid.
It figured to ultimately weed out walk-ons, athletes on partial scholarships and, in extreme cases, entire teams. In preparing for the settlement to be approved, schools across the country have been busy cutting players who, in turn, were finding spots on new teams.
Attorneys argued that undoing all those moves would add even more turbulence to an already tumultuous landscape.
Not her problem, Wilken said, in insisting both sides jumped the gun in making the moves.
"The fact that the Court granted preliminary approval of the settlement agreement should not have been interpreted as an indication that it was certain that the Court would grant final approval," Wilken said of the preliminary nod she gave back in October that set these transactions in motion.