Donovan Dent’s college basketball story has taken another sharp turn.
After announcing in May that he was retiring from basketball, the UCLA Bruins guard is now trying to keep his career alive by pursuing a fifth year of NCAA eligibility. KRQE, a local television station in New Mexico, reported that Dent is planning to continue playing after all.
“I just looked at it as another opportunity because I was completely done with it, and seeing that they made a fifth year possible and all of my coaches and my family were like, 'Let’s give it one more,'” Dent told KRQE. “They kind of talked to me about it, and I was like, okay. We just look at it like another opportunity for a blessing, I guess.”
Dent said he still does not know where he would play.
The catch is that he still has to apply for that extra year. The rules are being put in place to make it possible, but they would not have covered Dent’s class when he entered college.
Dent spent his first three college seasons at New Mexico, where he was named Mountain West Player of the Year in 2024-25. That performance earned him a move to UCLA for the 2025-26 season in the Big Ten.
His situation is another reminder of how tangled college basketball’s modern era has become. For most of the sport’s history, four years was the limit.
That was the end of the discussion. Now Dent is trying to claim a year that once wasn’t even on the table, and in today’s college sports world, he just might get it.
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