Fourqurean, Nyzier v. National Collegiate Athletic Association

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 6, 2025
Docket3:25-cv-00068
StatusUnknown

This text of Fourqurean, Nyzier v. National Collegiate Athletic Association (Fourqurean, Nyzier v. National Collegiate Athletic Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fourqurean, Nyzier v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, (W.D. Wis. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

NYZIER FOURQUREAN,

Plaintiff, OPINION AND ORDER v. 25-cv-68-wmc NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION,

Defendant.

Plaintiff Nyzier Fourqurean seeks a preliminary injunction enjoining defendant National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) from enforcing the so-called “Five-Year Rule,”1 Article 12.8, that prevents him from competing in a fifth season of college football. Specifically, he asserts that the NCAA’s bylaws violate § 1 of the Sherman Act and a host of Wisconsin state laws. Because plaintiff is likely to succeed on his Sherman Act claim on the current record, and would suffer irreparable injury without injunctive relief, the court will grant a preliminary injunction for the reasons explained below. UNDISPUTED FACTS2 For the last two years, Fourqurean has been a student-athlete on the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s (“UW”) football team who most recently played for UW during the 2024 football season. (Pl. Ex. G (dkt. #4-7).) Fourqurean initially enrolled at an NCAA

1 The Five-Year-Rule is really a misnomer in this case, where defendant is not claiming plaintiff’s additional year of eligibility violates the Five-Year Rule but rather a subpart of that rule, limiting student-athletes to “four seasons of intercollegiate competition in any one sport.”

2 Except as noted, this factual summary relies principally on defendant’s responses to plaintiff’s proposed findings of fact (“RPFF”). Division II program, Grand Valley State University (“GVSU”) in fall 2020. (RPFF ¶ 4.) However, GVSU’s 2020-2021 football season was cancelled due to COVID-19 (RPFF ¶ 5), and the NCAA approved a “season-of-competition waiver” for that season, provided that

the student-athlete met certain criteria. DII approves season-of-competition, eligibility relief for 2020-21, NCAA https://www.ncaa.org/news/2020/7/22/dii-approves-season-of- competition-eligibility-relief-for-2020-21.aspx (last visited Feb. 4, 2025). Fourqurean apparently qualified for that waiver. In the summer of 2021, Fourqurean’s father passed away, causing him mental health

challenges and loss of weeks of off-season training, as well as loss of concentration and commitment during most of that season. (RPFF ¶ 6; Fourqurean Decl. (dkt. #26) ¶ 5.) During GVSU’s 2021 football season, Fourqurean played in 11 games, but with only 155 total snaps/reps, representing roughly three, full games. (RPFF ¶¶ 8-9; Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4- 1) 5.)3 In contrast, during the 2022 GVSU football season, he played in 13 games with 515 total snaps/reps. (Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 12.) Fourqurean also earned no name, image,

and likeness (“NIL”) money while he was at GVSU. (RPFF ¶ 8.) He then transferred to UW where he played in the 2023 and 2024 football seasons, playing in 25 total games. (Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 12.) At UW, he did earn NIL money in each of his two seasons: $5,000 in 2023 and $45,000 in 2024. Based on discussions to date, Fourqurean expects

3 Although defendant objects to the three-game calculation, asserting that plaintiff has cited to no admissible evidence, there is admissible evidence that UW represented Fourqurean’s 155 snaps amounted to 3 games of play in its waiver application on his behalf. (Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 5.) Even if this were admissible evidence, defendant further asserts that UW’s calculation is wrong because he actually played in 11 games, but that argument does not actually rebut UW’s conclusion as to how many games 155 snaps equates. to earn hundreds of thousands of dollars in NIL deals in 2025 if he is allowed to continue playing football at UW, though he has not yet signed a contract with UW.4 In December 2024, UW applied for a waiver on Fourqurean’s behalf, asserting that

his father’s death impacted his experience at GVSU. (RPFF ¶ 12; Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 2.) Specifically, UW asserted that relief was appropriate under NCAA Division I Article 12.8.1.7.1.1 (Five-Year Rule waiver) and NCAA Division II Article 14.4.3.4.1.7 (three- game exception). (Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 6.) According to the Five-Year Rule, Article 12.8, “A student-athlete shall not engage in more than four seasons of intercollegiate competition in

any one sport,” and “A student-athlete shall complete the student-athlete’s seasons of participation within five calendar years from the beginning of the semester or quarter in which the student-athlete first registered for a minimum full-time program of studies in a collegiate institution.” (Dkt. #16-1, at 17 (emphases added).) Article 12.8.1.7.1.1 allows for waiver of the Five-Year Rule if, among other circumstances, the “student-athlete is deprived of the opportunity to participate for more than one season in his or her sport within the

five-year period of eligibility for reasons that are beyond the control of the student-athlete or the institution.” (Id. at 19 (emphases added).) Although NCAA Division II had no exception for limited participation in a given season while Fourqurean was at GVSU, beginning in January 2023, that division’s Article 14.4.3.4.1.7 allowed a football student-athlete “representing a Division II institution, in their initial year of collegiate

4 More specifically, Christopher Overton, a sports marketing consultant, estimates that Fourqurean could earn between $250,000 and $500,000 in NIL next season (Overton Decl. (dkt. #30) ¶ 3), but because Overton’s declaration was provided uninvited only after the preliminary injunction hearing, the court does not specifically rely on this declaration. enrollment,” to “participate in up to three contests in a season without using a season of competition.” (Dkt. #16-2, at 14); DII adopts football proposals providing more season-of- competition flexibility, spring scrimmage, NCAA https://www.ncaa.org/news/2023/1/14/media-

center-dii-adopts-football-proposals-providing-more-season-of-competition-flexibility- spring-scrimmage-opportunities.aspx (last visited Feb. 5, 2025). In contrast, Division I Article 12.8.3.1.6 allows a Division I football student-athlete to participate in four games without using a season of competition. (RPFF ¶ 10; Dkt. #16-1, at 21.) Also, the NCAA recently issued a blanket waiver excepting Division I

post-season competition (conference championship, bowl, and College Football Playoff games) from counting towards a player’s four-game limit. REPORT OF THE NCAA DIVISION I FOOTBALL BOWL SUBDIVISION OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE AUGUST 22, 2024, NCAA https://ncaaorg.s3.amazonaws.com/committees/d1/fbsfboc/Aug2024D1F BSOC_Report.pdf (last visited Feb. 4, 2025). In support of its application for a waiver of the Five-Year Rule on Fourqurean’s

behalf, the UW represented to the NCAA that: (1) Fourqurean’s 2021 snap count equated to three full contests or less; (2) his initial year of enrollment was really the 2021 season due to the canceled 2020 season; and (3) his personal circumstances (2020 canceled season, lack of roster depth, team injuries, blow out victories, and the impacts of his father’s death) supported granting him a waiver. (Pl. Ex. A (dkt. #4-1) 5.) While there is some dispute as to whether UW asked for a hardship waiver specifically, it certainly asserted that

there were circumstances beyond Fourqurean’s control under Article 12.8.1.7.1.1 and under the “totality of circumstances” more generally. (Id.) On January 29, 2025, the NCAA summarily denied the waiver application explaining: Requirements of the legislation are not satisfied: Specifically, staff noted legislation as established by the Division II membership, specifically identifies circumstances that support relief from use of a season of competition following participation in competition.

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Fourqurean, Nyzier v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fourqurean-nyzier-v-national-collegiate-athletic-association-wiwd-2025.