PJS article
01-25-2025, 08:41 AM
How Bradley's star guard could end up with a another year of college eligibility
PEORIA — Duke Deen is leading the Bradley Braves into the final 10-game stretch of his regular-season college career.
Or is it? The fifth-year star guard for the Braves could come back for a sixth season under a deal struck by the NCAA and announced on Dec. 23.
Players whose NCAA Division-I eligibility expires at the end of the 2024-25 season, but burned eligibility previously playing junior college basketball, will receive an additional year in 2025-26.
And that includes Duke Deen. He played the 2020-21 season at Panola College, a junior college, then moved on in 2021-22 to D-1 Troy before joining Bradley, where he is a fifth-year senior playing his third season on the Hilltop.
"We believe that is correct," Bradley coach Brian Wardle said earlier this month. "But really we haven't thought about that at all. We'll see where that (rule change) goes and if it becomes official and good to go.
"There's going to be a lot of back-and-forth (with NCAA rules) between now and then. We're just taking it one day at a time, trying to block out all the noise and the distractions and stay focused on the next game."
Deen is laser focused on that, as well, but he took a moment this week to talk about the NCAA eligibility ruling and his future.
"When that ruling was announced (in late December), Coach Wardle pulled me into his office and we talked about it," Deen said. "I'll definitely take it into consideration, playing another year. I might want to do that." Get the Sports Headlines newsletter in your inbox.
Deen has a 2-year-old son, C.J., and an extra year in the Name, Image and Likeness era could make an impact on supporting his child, especially if that extra year happens hypothetically with a Power 5 team and the bigger money that would likely follow.
"You can't overlook the NIL in today's equation," Deen said. "It's a big factor for everyone. I don't think anyone really knows for sure what is going to happen with (NCAA eligibility) rules. And I'd have to decide if I really want to continue with school, too.
"Right now, I'm focused on staying level-headed and leading this team. That's not going to change." The Diego Pavia rule and how the NCAA got here
{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","src":"https:\/\/www.pjstar.com\/gcdn\/authoring\/authoring-images\/2025\/01\/09\/NJOS\/77564330007-010825-budrake-05.jpg?width=660&height=504&fit=crop&format=pjpg&auto=webp"}
Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia played two years of junior college ball before his NCAA career started.
His NCAA eligibility expired with the conclusion of the 2024-25 season. But he contended that now, in the changing NCAA climate of increasing NIL payments, his expiring eligibility would cost him an estimated $1 million in NIL earnings he might have been awarded next season, had those junior college years not counted against him.
So Pavia won an injunction in a Tennessee court, in what was seen as a legal blow to the NCAA.
The NCAA has appealed the court ruling, but on Dec. 23 announced it was extending eligibility to 2025-26 for athletes with a junior college history like Pavia.
So what could happen with Deen? Well, he could decide to call it a college career, and move on with his life. He could return to Bradley for another season, although that could be complicated for a roster that has a group of talented, incoming guards and returnees.
Or he could transfer to a Power 5 school in search of a large NIL payment, an option that feels like the best fit. All of that is something that Deen and Bradley will address after the season.
Right now, it's the big picture of the Missouri Valley Conference.
"All any of us are thinking about, focused on ... is getting better, and winning (in March) in St. Louis to get to the NCAA Tournament," Deen said. "We can be better offensively. We can be better defensively. Good is not what we're after, we have to be great.
"I sense that we're close to that. All of us do."
GO Braves!
​​​