🏈 Explaining the "SHIRT COLORS"

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This is the most common. A redshirt year is a year in which a player is on scholarship and can practice, but does not play, in exchange for an extra year of eligibility. If a player redshirts — meaning they don't play for one year — they will have five years to compete in four seasons.
The term comes from a Nebraska player in the 1940s who chose to only practice, not play, as a sophomore, in order to catch up physically. He wore a red jersey with no numbers on it ... a red shirt. He's the oldest example of a player intentionally held out of a season for this reason. The names of these other 'shirt terms spring from redshirting.
Many college football players redshirt their freshmen years in order to get physically ready. Other players redshirt due to injuries. These are the rules a player must follow in order to obtain a medical redshirt:
  • The injury must be incapacitating, a season-ending injury.
  • The injury must occur prior to the start of the second half of the season.
  • The student-athlete must not have competed in more than 30 percent of the season or three contests, whichever is greater.
The NCAA has also added an academic redshirt this year. Players will be forced to redshirt their freshmen years if they don't meet certain academic
requirements from High School




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This often comes up in recruiting around National Signing Day. A grayshirt is when a team offers a player enrollment on scholarship at the start of the second semester, after the upcoming season. The athlete then has five years to play four seasons, with the ability to redshirt at some point.
Athletes who grayshirt are allowed to enroll as students. They go to class for the first semester as part-time students, either at the school or at a junior college, without starting their eligibility clocks. Then they begin as full-time students on scholarship.
Grayshirts have commonly been used by programs that oversign, which means not having enough roster spots for all of their commits. Sometimes, coaches are up front about grayshirting from the beginning. However, other times, they will force grayshirts on athletes at the last minute, leaving them unable to find schools that will allow them to play immediately


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Blueshirting wasn't used until recently, and it still isn't common, but it's essentially another loophole to get around oversigning.
The blueshirt rule allows schools to put "unrecruited" athletes on scholarship once they arrive on campus, but count them against the next year's scholarship total, as long as they don't play. Here's what it means to be "recruited," according to the NCAA:
  • Was provided an official visit to the campus;
  • Had arranged, in-person, off-campus contact with a coach; or
  • Was sent an NLI or other written scholarship offer.
Coaches can contact players and have them on campus for unofficial visits — when the recruits pay their ways — without technically recruiting them. Essentially, as long as a recruit doesn't take an official visit or host one of that school's coaches, he wasn't "recruited" by that school.


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The more common term for a greenshirt is "early enrollee." A greenshirt is a player who graduates high school in December of their senior year and opts to enroll in college before Signing Day. Athletes who greenshirt still have five years to play four seasons, so they can still redshirt.
There are many benefits to greenshirting. These players can get ahead on their classes. They are on full scholarship in the spring and are allowed to participate in spring practice and work out with the team; Alabama used an early enrollee quarterback to prepare for Clemson in this year's National Championship.
Greenshirting has become much more common in recent years, as players are looking to get college-ready quicker
 
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The NCAA has also added an academic redshirt this year. Players will be forced to redshirt their freshmen years if they don't meet certain academic
requirements from High School
I see this and I'm reminded of questioning why the NCAA chose to kill Prop 48 in the first place. I don't recall.

FWIW, I looked around for a few minutes trying to find the schedule for the Football Rules Committee...couldn't find when they are taking the vote(s) on the new redshirt rules.
 

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