The college football offseason often runs quiet. Once the transfer portal closes, the NCAA rarely generates much news. This ...
NCAA officials approve major targeting rule changes for college football, removing first-time carryover suspensions and ...
The Division I Football Bowl Subdivision Oversight Committee has announced rule changes for the 2026 college football season.
The NCAA's Division I Football Rules Subcommittee recommended changes to current targeting rules that mandate a half-game suspension for offenses.
A player ejected for targeting for the first time during the season, regardless of which half it occurs, may participate in ...
NCAA’s targeting rule overhaul for 2026 draws fierce debate from fans questioning whether the change goes far enough. Picture ...
A targeting penalty will no longer automatically take a player off the field for the following game. The Division I Football ...
The college football offseason overall is pretty quiet this time of year. In 2026, it has been a little bit louder with ...
NCAA Division I football rules makers have proposed a one-year trial rule allowing a player disqualified for targeting for ...
Oklahoma's Reggie Powers III (13) was called for targeting on Missouri's Kevin Coleman Jr. in a game in November. Kevin Jairaj / Imagn Images The NCAA Division I football rules subcommittee has ...
The NCAA has officially changed college football's targeting rule, impacting penalties for the 2026 season and beyond.
The NCAA rewrote the rule books for the 2026 season with a major amendment to the targeting penalty structure.