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Owen Heinecke wins injunction in eligibility fight with NCAA

Owen Heinecke won an injunction Thursday as a judge sided with the OU linebacker in his fight for another year of NCAA eligibility.

Court rules that OU linebacker Owen Heinecke is allowed to play for Sooners
Court rules that OU linebacker Owen Heinecke is allowed to play for Sooners

Oklahoma linebacker won his eligibility fight Thursday when a judge granted an injunction allowing him to keep playing while his case against the moves forward. Heinecke had been scheduled to appear in court Thursday morning to argue for another year of eligibility at the .

The ruling gives Heinecke the immediate relief he sought as he tries to stay on the field for the upcoming season. He sued the NCAA to play football at Oklahoma, saying his path was disrupted by the 2020 pandemic and other factors, and he told reporters, “I’m someone who cares about the university,” adding, “I’m just starting to reap the rewards, and it’s just another year to go at it.” He also said, “I hope they’ll see my case for that.”

The fight now turns to whether Heinecke will ultimately be granted the extra season he wants. The NCAA argued he already used a year when he played lacrosse for four games before starting his college football career, and said athletes are allowed five years to complete four seasons under its rules. Heinecke’s case centers on whether that clock should be adjusted for the years he says were lost to circumstances beyond his control.

OU coach and general manager were set to testify earlier in support of Heinecke, and compliance director pointed to a similar NCAA case involving Lyde at as precedent for an extra year. Venables has said college football is developmental and that without more time Heinecke could be at risk of getting cut from an NFL roster.

The dispute also has taken on a wider meaning inside Oklahoma football. Bishop Kelley High School coach said, “All these kids in college got relief, but all these kids in high school did not,” arguing that the COVID waiver for a fifth year of eligibility kept roster spots frozen and left no pipeline for high school athletes. For Heinecke, Thursday’s injunction buys time. For the NCAA, the question is whether one player’s lost years qualify for one more season.

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