Bearcats Could Suddenly Add The Veteran Help Calhoun Has Been Waiting For

A court ruling opens the door for veteran talent MJ Collins and Kolby King to potentially bolster the Cincinnati Bearcats' roster amidst new eligibility considerations.

The Cincinnati Bearcats are on the verge of adding two more names to Jerrod Calhoun’s first roster, and a court ruling has cleared the path for it to happen.

An Ohio judge granted a preliminary injunction for 15 players to pursue a fifth year of college basketball eligibility, opening the door for Class of 2022 players such as MJ Collins and Kolby King to suit up while the lawsuit works its way through the legal process over the next few months. The court also set a Case Management Conference for August 4, 2026, at 2:00 pm.

“The Court GRANTS Plaintiffs' Motion for Preliminary Injunction as to Count One, Breach of Contract,” the case language stated. “The Court has not seen sufficient evidence regarding Count Two, Violation of the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act, and will DENY Plaintiffs' Motion for Preliminary Injunction as to this claim.

The Court GRANTS Plaintiffs' request for injunctive relief from Bylaw 12.6 and GRANTS Plaintiffs' request for injunctive relief from the requirements of the Transfer Portal. Players had no reason to enter the Transfer Portal if they believed they were not eligible to play; therefore, relief is granted for these Plaintiffs only.

“The Court's findings are based on the limited record presented to the Court. This is a Preliminary Injunction, not a final judgment. The Court sets this matter for a Case Management Conference on August 4, 2026, at 2:00 pm, at which time the Court shall issue a scheduling order.”

Cincinnati had kept two roster spots open in case Collins and King became available, and that now appears to be the plan. On3’s Pete Nakos laid out the situation last month, noting that “Xavier’s Filip Borovicanin and Cincinnati’s MJ Collins are among 15 athletes who have filed a lawsuit against the NCAA in the wake of the NCAA approving an age-based eligibility model,” and that the suit sought to stop the NCAA from “playing NCAA Division I basketball in the 2026-27 season on the basis that they have already competed in four seasons of competition.” Nakos also reported that the suit was filed by attorneys Darren Heitner and Ryan Downton.

He also explained how the age-based model works. “The age-based model calls for an athlete’s eligibility clock to begin upon initial full-time enrollment in college or at the beginning of the academic year following their 19th birthday, whichever occurs earlier.

The Cabinet’s decision is not final until its meeting concludes on Wednesday. The age-based eligibility implementation will begin this summer.

Recruits starting in 2027 are age-based only. Currently enrolled athletes with eligibility remaining after the 2025-26 academic year will be allowed to apply the age-based model or continue with the previous eligibility rules, whichever is most beneficial to that individual.”

If Collins and King are ultimately added, Cincinnati will have filled out its 2026-27 group.

Collins, a 2026 All-Mountain West Second Team selection, was Calhoun’s top scorer at Utah State last season. The 6-foot-4, 195-pound wing started all 36 games, one of only two Aggies to do so, and played 30.7 minutes per game. He finished with 17.5 points per game, fourth in the Mountain West and first on the team, while adding 2.5 rebounds and 1.6 assists on 48.7% shooting, including 36.1% from beyond the arc.

King, meanwhile, gave Utah State steady production off the guard spot. The 6-foot-1, 185-pound guard averaged 7.5 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game last season, and he hit 46 of 117 attempts from three-point range, good for 39%. He would likely fit as a depth piece in the rotation while bringing more experience to the roster.

Bearcat Bunch also projected what the final scholarship picture could look like if both players are added, noting changes in the graphic as the “5 in 5” issue moved forward. A separate update said the injunction allows the 15 athletes in Ohio to gain an extra year and transfer now outside of the portal window.

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For the Bearcats, the timing matters because the transfer market is still taking shape and any change in who can enter it can alter the board quickly. A pretrial conference is set for August 4, and until then Cincinnati and other programs will be watching closely to see whether the case opens the door for more players to pursue one more season, or whether the NCAAs new framework holds firm. [Read more 🡒]