Clemson Fans Need To Brace For A Troubling RJ Godfrey Twist

Amidst NCAA eligibility changes, RJ Godfrey's lawsuit hopes to secure an extra year on the court, potentially with a new team.

Former Clemson forward RJ Godfrey is taking his fight for another college season to court.

Godfrey is part of a group lawsuit filed July 9 in Cobb County, Georgia, court records show, with the goal of securing a fifth year of eligibility from the NCAA. The complaint includes 16 players and argues that the NCAA "unfairly" limited how many games those athletes can play during their five-year eligibility window and "unjustifiably (restrained)" their ability to earn money through NIL.

The players are seeking immediate injunctive relief that would let them sign scholarship and revenue-sharing deals with schools, along with third-party NIL agreements, for the 2026-27 season.

The case comes after the NCAA approved a rule change on June 23 that gives athletes five years of eligibility over five seasons instead of five years to play four seasons. Under the new setup, redshirts are gone, and waivers will only be granted for pregnancy, military service or religious missions. The five-year clock begins the academic year after an athlete’s 19th birthday or when they enroll in college, whichever comes first.

But there’s a catch that hits Godfrey directly: athletes who finished their fourth year of eligibility in 2025-26 were not given that extra season. That’s why lawsuits like this one have started popping up.

If Godfrey wins, he likely won’t be back at Clemson. The lawsuit says Oklahoma, Arkansas and LSU have shown interest in him if he gets another year. It also points to the reality that Clemson has just one roster spot left and wouldn’t have the money to bring back a player at that level.

The Tigers have already moved to replace his production, adding Samford forward Dylan Faulkner and San Francisco forward David Fuchs in the portal while also keeping starting center Carter Welling.

Godfrey’s legal team includes Darren Heitner, who helped Clemson football wide receiver Tristan Smith land another year of eligibility in a South Carolina court in June.

For Godfrey, the appeal is obvious. He had pre-NBA draft workouts but went undrafted and didn’t sign an undrafted free-agent deal, so another season could help his stock. And if that season comes, it likely happens in the SEC rather than back in Tigertown.

Godfrey spent one season at Georgia in 2024-25 before transferring back to Clemson for 2025-26. In that season, he led the Tigers in scoring at 12 points per game and ranked second on the team with 5.3 rebounds per game.

Over his Clemson career, he averaged 7.2 points and 3.6 rebounds while shooting 60% from the field across 104 games and 33 starts. Clemson made the NCAA Tournament in 2024, including an Elite Eight run, and again in 2026 with Godfrey on the roster.

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