Oklahoma States Kashie Natt Fight Just Took A Stressful Turn

With Oklahoma State University's basketball season approaching, Coach Steve Lutz stands behind player Kashie Natt in his legal battle with the NCAA, hoping for a court decision that will allow Natt to contribute to the Cowboys' promising lineup.

Oklahoma State coach Steve Lutz is backing Kashie Natt as the transfer’s eligibility fight moves into court.

Natt, who arrived in Stillwater earlier this offseason, filed a lawsuit in Payne County, Okla., this week seeking an injunction that would allow him to play in 2026-27 after the NCAA rejected his waiver request for next season. For now, that leaves Oklahoma State with 13 players heading into next season, with both remaining scholarships already tied up pending waivers and litigation. One is for Natt, and the other belongs to center Parsa Fallah, who is also asking the NCAA for one more year.

Lutz made his stance clear in a statement posted to social media on Wednesday.

“Kashie has been a standout teammate. We’re doing everything in our power to support him and will continue to stand in his corner as he and his legal representation move forward. This matter is now in the hands of the court, and we remain hopeful for a positive resolution.”

Natt’s path to this point has been a long one, and he knew before transferring to Oklahoma State that he would need a waiver to be eligible next season. His college career has taken him through junior college, the NAIA and Division I.

After graduating from Rayville (La.) High School in 2021, he spent the 2021-22 season at Southern University-Shreveport, a junior college.

He then played three seasons at LSU-Alexandria, where he emerged as one of the nation’s top NAIA players. He left there as the program’s all-time leader in scoring with 1,592 points and rebounding with 780.

He was a two-time NAIA all-American and the 2025 national player of the year.

Last season, Natt played at Sam Houston, his fifth year in college basketball, and was classified as a graduate student. He earned CUSA Defensive Player of the Year honors while averaging 8.2 points per game.

He submitted his waiver request before the NCAA approved its new “5-for-5” legislation last week. Under that rule, he would appear to have exhausted his eligibility.

The NCAA is supposed to apply the rule in the way that is most beneficial to the student athlete, and the suit argues that his five-year clock should begin with his enrollment at LSU-A in August 2022. If that view holds, he would still have one season left.

“The NCAA breached its contractual obligations … without applying the individualized waiver criteria invoked by OSU without reasoned engagement with the extenuating circumstances submitted, without properly evaluating the five-year-clock issue, and without adjudicating the requests under the process the NCAA’s own bylaws contemplate,” per the suit.

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