Former Vanderbilt Big Man Is Fighting For One More College Year

Jalen Washington challenges NCAA rules by taking legal action for another year of eligibility, setting a potential precedent for college athletes.

Former Vanderbilt center Jalen Washington is making a legal push for one more year of college eligibility, with his lawyers telling Pete Nakos that he has filed a lawsuit against the NCAA.

At the center of Washington’s case is a request for a temporary restraining order. His argument is tied to the NCAA’s new age-based eligibility model, which he says would have given him that extra season if he had arrived in college a year later.

For now, a return to Vanderbilt does not appear to be in the cards. Washington never publicly entered the transfer portal, though he could have done so privately.

The lawsuit lays out the broader challenge in blunt terms: "Five years to graduate, five years to practice, five years to play. A common-sense approach to NCAA athlete eligibility-but it took a class action lawsuit and a Presidential Executive Order for the NCAA to finally bring the proposal to its Division I Cabinet," The lawsuit says, "[T]he legislation is considered an urgent matter with potential for implementation as soon as this coming academic year (fall 2026).”

² The NCAA announced the impending change in April 2026, with final approval on June 23, 2026. While the rule change will cure many of the NCAA’s statutory violations on a go-forward basis, it dramatically exacerbates the NCAA’s mistreatment of Plaintiffs and every other athlete from the high school graduating class of 2022 (“Class of 2022”)."

Washington has also signed a deal with the Chicago Bulls that will let him play in the NBA Summer League, and he is still expected to take part while the case moves forward.

Washington spent three seasons at North Carolina before transferring to Vanderbilt, where he was looking for a bigger role. He averaged 5.5 points and 3.7 rebounds per game for the Commodores while shooting 58.8% from the field and 29.4% from 3-point range.

In Other News...

Former Vanderbilt Guard Suddenly Lands In Major NCAA Eligibility Fight

Jason Edwards basketball path has already been a winding one, and now the former Vanderbilt guard is part of a broader NCAA eligibility fight that could reshape how long players are allowed to stay on the floor. Edwards left Vanderbilt after the 2024-25 season and later surfaced at Providence, with a college rsum that also includes stops at Dodge City Community College, North Texas and Miles College.

The lawsuit, led by Jalen Washington, is aimed at securing a fifth season of NCAA eligibility for players who have already used up the current window. It also comes against the backdrop of a proposed NCAA rule change expected to take effect by fall 2026, one that would allow five years to graduate, practice and play, leaving this case as part of a much larger debate over how the sport counts time. [Read more 🡒]

Alabama Fans Finally Have A Freshman To Watch In The Backfield

CBS Sports writer Brad Crawfords latest look at the SECs top freshmen put a familiar regional spotlight on the leagues most talked-about newcomers, and it included Alabama running back EJ Crowell among the dozen names to know. Crawfords list also featured Tennessee quarterback Faizon Brandon, who arrives with a chance to push for the starting job, while the discussion around Crowell centered on the kind of early impact a young back can have when a roster needs juice in the run game.

For Vanderbilt, though, the omission of quarterback Jared Curtis stood out just as much as the names that made the cut. Crawford pointed to the Commodores tougher schedule, especially the road slate, as part of the reason Curtis was left off the list, a reminder that freshman buzz can look different depending on the team context. It leaves Vanderbilt with a promising young quarterback in the background of a broader SEC freshman debate, even as rivals like Alabama and Tennessee draw most of the attention. [Read more 🡒]