Kashie Natt is back around Oklahoma State men’s basketball, at least for now, after a judge’s initial ruling on Monday gave him temporary relief in his fight with the NCAA.
According to attorney Darren Heitner on X, the ex parte ruling means the NCAA is “enjoined from enforcing its June 24 cancellations, from threatening Oklahoma State with sanctions for complying, and from enforcing the Rule of Restitution.”
That kind of order is typically reserved for emergencies, when a judge believes a plaintiff could suffer irreparable harm before the other side’s case is fully heard. It is based on one side’s filing, in this case Natt’s, and it is only temporary. The legal process is far from over.
Heitner filed the lawsuit on Natt’s behalf in Payne County, Oklahoma, where Oklahoma State University is located and Stillwater serves as the county seat.
District Judge John Canavan signed the order and found that Natt’s ability to compete next season would be irreparably harmed by the NCAA’s decision to deny his waiver request for the 2026-27 season.
For now, the ruling lets Natt practice with the team, take part in all team activities and receive any athletics-related benefits. It also blocks the NCAA from punishing either Natt or Oklahoma State while the case moves through court.
Canavan wrote that the order restores the status quo from before June 24, but it is not a final decision. A full hearing will be held later, though that date will be set by a new judge and has not yet been scheduled. That hearing will decide Natt’s eligibility for next season.
The order also laid out the waiver history behind the dispute. Oklahoma State submitted two formal NCAA waiver requests for Natt - a season of competition/participation waiver and an extension of eligibility waiver. The NCAA canceled both, saying Natt had competed in 2025-26 after receiving relief in December 2024.
Canavan said Natt and his attorney showed a “likelihood’ of success on the merits of at least one of the claims. That included arguments that the NCAA canceled the waiver requests without individual review, failed to apply the waiver criteria and failed to address the five-year clock argument.
Natt’s basketball path has already been a winding one. He played for Sam Houston in 2025-26, where he was named the CUSA Defensive Player of the Year and averaged 8.2 points per game.
Before that, he spent three seasons at LSU-A, earning two-time NAIA all-American honors and the 2025 NAIA National Player of the Year. He finished his career there as the program’s all-time leader in scoring with 1,592 points and rebounding with 780.
He started his college career at Southern University-Shreveport.
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