Key Takeaways
- MADE Hoops and Gold Level Sports & Entertainment are launching the Transfer Portal Combine, a first-of-its-kind evaluation event for DII, DIII, JUCO, and international basketball players
- The event takes place May 15-16, 2026 at the Baltimore Convention Center during an NCAA official evaluation period
- Over 200 college coaches are expected to attend for in-person player evaluation
- The NABC will serve as Official Education Partner, leading mandatory sessions on the regulatory landscape
- The combine will offer verified measurements, professional analytics, and HD game film through a centralized digital platform
A Centralized Stage for Overlooked Talent Pools
MADE Hoops, one of the largest grassroots basketball platforms in the U.S., and Gold Level Sports & Entertainment (GLSE) have announced a joint venture called the Transfer Portal Combine (TPC). The event is designed to give players outside Division I a professional evaluation environment during a live, NCAA-sanctioned window.
The two-day event will feature competitive games alongside professional-grade infrastructure: verified player measurements, tracked analytics, and high-definition film. All data will be housed in a single digital platform accessible to participating coaches and scouts.
“For too long, players outside of Division I have had to navigate the transfer market without a real stage, relying on social media for recruiting,” said Chad Babel, Founder and CEO of MADE Hoops. “We’re building the first professional evaluation environment for this talent.”
Why the Non-DI Transfer Market Matters Now
The modern transfer portal has reshaped college basketball roster construction, but most of the infrastructure and attention has centered on Division I movement. DII, DIII, JUCO, and international players lack a comparable centralized showcase, leaving coaches to rely on fragmented film and secondhand evaluation.
GLSE co-founder Darren Duncan, who launched the company alongside NBA champion and analyst Danny Green, described the initiative as bringing “structure to a marketplace that has largely been fragmented.”
The NABC’s involvement adds a compliance and education layer. Executive Director Craig Robinson noted that equipping athletes and transfers with practical knowledge of the evolving recruiting landscape is a growing priority.
What This Means for College Basketball’s Evaluation Pipeline
The TPC model borrows from professional combine formats and applies it to a segment of college basketball that has historically operated without centralized evaluation tools. If the event gains traction, it could become a recurring fixture in the recruiting calendar for programs looking to identify undervalued talent across lower divisions and international pipelines.
MADE Hoops, founded in 2014 by Chad Babel, is backed by LRMR Ventures, Boardroom, and SC Holdings. GLSE operates as a sports property and platform builder focused on the global basketball ecosystem.
Both players and coaches can register at thetransferportalcombine.com.
Source: MADE Hoops / Gold Level Sports & Entertainment Press Release, April 2026
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President Trump’s New Executive Order Targets College Sports Eligibility, Transfers and Pay-for-Play, With Ripple Effects for High School Athletics
By Youth Sports Business ReportApril 3, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Key Takeaways
- President Trump signs an executive order enforcing a five-year eligibility window and limiting college athletes to one transfer before graduation
- Schools that play ineligible athletes could risk losing federal funding under the new directive
- The order calls for a national player agent registry and protections for women’s and Olympic sports funding
- Multiple legal experts say the order is likely to face court challenges on constitutional grounds
- High school athletes, families and club programs face a shifting recruiting and transfer landscape heading into 2026-27
What the Executive Order Does
President Trump signed an executive order on Friday April 3rd 2026 directing the NCAA to enforce a set of rules designed to stabilize college athletics. The order establishes a five-year participation window for college athletes, limits transfers to one before graduation without a sit-out period, and targets pay-for-play arrangements facilitated by collectives and similar entities. The rule changes are scheduled to take effect Aug. 1, 2026.
The order also directs the NCAA to create a national registry for player agents and establish policies that prevent schools from cutting scholarships or opportunities in women’s and Olympic sports in order to fund athlete compensation.
Schools found in violation could face consequences tied to federal grants and contracts. The White House stated that federal agencies will evaluate “whether violations of such rules render a university unfit for Federal grants and contracts.”
Legal Uncertainty and Enforcement Questions
The order’s enforceability remains an open question. Multiple attorneys who work with colleges and athletes told ESPN they believe judges would rule the order unconstitutional if challenged. Attorney Mit Winter, who follows college sports law, noted the order creates a situation where the NCAA and schools may have to choose between following a federal court order or an executive order.
“Either way, we’re likely going to see litigation challenging the EO by athletes and third parties,” Winter said.
NCAA President Charlie Baker, speaking at the Women’s Final Four in Phoenix, acknowledged the order’s alignment with ongoing discussions but emphasized that a permanent solution requires congressional action. “We need congressional action to sort of seal the deal on a number of these things,” Baker said.
In the Senate, bipartisan negotiations between Ted Cruz and Maria Cantwell continue, with a bill potentially arriving this spring. In the House, the SCORE Act could be reintroduced in April after two delayed votes. The employment classification debate, specifically whether college athletes can be deemed employees of their schools, remains one of the largest obstacles to a legislative compromise.
What This Means for High School Athletes and Families
While the executive order targets college athletics directly, the downstream effects on high school and club sports could be significant. Here is what youth sports stakeholders should be watching.
- Recruiting timelines could tighten. A one-transfer limit before graduation changes the calculus for high school athletes choosing a college program. The portal era encouraged a “try it and transfer” mentality. If the one-transfer rule holds, the initial college decision carries far more weight, which means high school athletes and their families will face increased pressure to make informed commitments earlier in the process.
- Club and travel programs may see shifting demand. With fewer transfer opportunities available, the scouting and development window at the high school and club level becomes more consequential. Programs that can credibly prepare athletes for college-level competition and connect them with the right institutional fit stand to gain. Exposure events, showcases and recruiting platforms that help athletes evaluate programs beyond just NIL offers could see increased relevance.
- NIL education becomes a high school priority. The order’s call for a national player agent registry and its crackdown on pay-for-play arrangements signal a more regulated NIL environment. High school athletes and families navigating NIL opportunities will need clearer guidance on what is permissible. Schools, clubs and advisory organizations that provide NIL literacy and compliance education are positioned to fill an increasingly important gap.
- The five-year window affects development pipelines. For high school athletes considering redshirt years, academic transitions or injury recovery timelines, the formalized five-year clock adds a layer of planning that starts well before enrollment.
The Bigger Picture for Youth Sports Business
The executive order reflects a broader trend of federal involvement in an industry undergoing rapid financial transformation. The $2.8 billion settlement approved earlier this year, which allows schools to pay athletes directly, fundamentally altered the economic structure of college athletics. The consequences of that shift are now filtering into the youth sports ecosystem.
For youth sports operators, facility owners and event organizers, the regulatory direction of college sports shapes the market they feed into. If transfer restrictions hold, the value proposition of long-term athlete development over short-term exposure could strengthen. If NIL regulation tightens, the advisory and compliance layer between high school athletes and college programs grows more important.
None of these outcomes are certain. The order’s legal durability is questionable, and congressional action remains the more likely vehicle for lasting change. But the signal is clear: the rules governing the pipeline from youth sports to college athletics are in active flux, and the organizations closest to that pipeline need to be paying attention.

