Last season, transfer guard Braeden Carrington became one of the best-utilized pieces on the Wisconsin Badgers’ basketball team. While never starting a game, Carrington notched 8.3 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.1 assists. However, with the 2025-26 campaign being Carrington’s fourth year of collegiate basketball, it looked as if he had exhausted all of his time at the college level. Suddenly, a lawsuit among a group of athletes could grant Carrington one final year on the hardwood.
Just recently, ESPN reported that 24 men’s and women’s players were granted an injunction in the state of Ohio on the basis that the NCAA’s new age-based model was unfair.
Carrington finished his sole season with the Badgers with three 20+ point games, including a 32-point barrage against Washington in a 90-73 win for head coach Greg Gard.
Carrington’s 281 points last season ranked fifth on the team, and his 40.1% from beyond the arc is the highest of any player on the roster with a minimum of 10 three-pointers taken.
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This article originally appeared on Badgers Wire: Wisconsin Badgers role player joins lawsuit seeking extra eligibility
Reporting by Connor Mardian, Badgers Wire / Badgers Wire
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

By Connor Mardian, Badgers Wire | USA TODAY Network
