CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — The NCAA accepted Devontez "Tez" Walker's transfer waiver on Thursday, making the wide receiver eligible to play for 14th-ranked North Carolina after the university fought for months to get him on the field.


What You Need To Know

  • The NCAA on Thursday said it accepted a transfer waiver for wide receiver Devontez Walker, enabling him to play for North Carolina

  • The NCAA this year tightened its transfer rules, and because Walker has transferred twice, he needed a waiver to play this season

  • The NCAA’s initial decision to decline Walker’s transfer waiver upset North Carolina's coach and state officials, who appealed to the college sports organization to reconsider

  • The NCAA on Thursday said it had gotten new information that enabled Walker to be granted the waiver

“It is unfortunate that UNC failed to provide this important information previously,” NCAA president Charlie Baker and Division I board of directors chair Jere Morehead said in a joint statement. “While we must be careful not to compromise a student-athlete’s right to privacy when it comes to sensitive issues, we want to assure the Division I membership and everyone watching how the new transfer rules are applied, that this meets the new transfer waiver standards."

The NCAA criticized the Tar Heels’ behavior and “decision to wage a public relations campaign,” calling it “inappropriate and outside the bounds of the process UNC’s own staff supported.”

“Had the UNC staff not behaved in this fashion and submitted this information weeks ago, this entire unfortunate episode could have been avoided,” the statement said.

UNC athletics director Bubba Cunningham called the NCAA’s justification for its announcement inaccurate.

“The university submitted all necessary information and documentation as it was made available to us at the time and we still believe Tez met all standards for waiver in early August,” Cunningham said on social media. “It is not clear why the NCAA delayed making the correct decision then, but we are pleased to get to the appropriate resolution now.”

North Carolina coach Mack Brown thanked those at the school who've worked to help with Walker's eligibility. He also thanked the NCAA for taking the time to reexamine Walker's case.

“We're happy for Tez," Brown said in a statement. “Everything that has transpired over the last few weeks has been for the sole purpose of helping and supporting him, and now he's going to have a chance to live his dream.”

Walker was informed of the NCAA's decision on Thursday.

“This hasn't been easy but I am looking forward to putting this in the past and moving forward,” Walker said in a statement released by the school. "I always knew UNC was a special place, but it has proved it over and over again the last few months."

Walker is a Charlotte native who attended West Charlotte High School. He played at N.C. Central in Durham and Kent State before transferring to North Carolina

The NCAA announced in January that it was tightening the waiver process, two years after transfer rules were changed to allow all athletes to switch schools one time as an undergraduate without sitting out a season. Because Walker has transferred twice, he needed a waiver to play this season.

The NCAA’s initial decision to decline Walker’s transfer waiver upset Brown, who called the decision unfair.

In a statement after the NCAA’s decision, Brown said he had “lost all faith” in the NCAA’s ability to govern college football, then ended by adding, “Shame on you, NCAA. SHAME ON YOU!”

The NCAA board of directors said afterward it was “troubled” by North Carolina’s public criticism of the decision to deny an eligibility waiver, adding that some committee members have received threats of violence.

State officials had rallied behind North Carolina's efforts to have Walker ruled eligible to play, and Gov. Roy Cooper said in August on social media that he had reached out to the NCAA. State Attorney General Josh Stein on Thursday announced the NCAA's decision on social media.

The unbeaten Tar Heels (4-0) host Syracuse on Saturday.