After some research, I have found that the claim that the NCAA is going to ban fans from storming the field after football games is not entirely true and misleading. While there have been discussions and arguments from conference commissioners, coaches, players, and media personalities for banning fans from rushing the field, there has yet to be a true decision made regarding the topic.
For primary sources, I reviewed public statements made by NCAA conferences and their commissioners, as well as coaches. At the beginning of the 2025-26 academic year, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey announced a rule change regarding fans storming courts and fields. This rule stated that violations will result in a flat fee of $500,000 instead of escalating fees that were set in 2023. However, Sankey went on to say "... if schools allow for visiting teams and officials to 'exit the field of play before they rush the field or court, a fine will not be given'" (Sports Business Journal, 2025).
An Additional primary source and NCAA conference took a similar approach to SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, and that is the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Similarly, at the beginning of the 2025-26 academic year, the ACC released a memo stating, "If fans storm the field or the court, the school will be in breach of the conference's event security policy, and will be subject to fines" (Sports Illustrated, 2025). While both of these conferences are punishing schools as well as their fans and students for storming the court or field, there has been no advancement in the argument for an outright ban, as these fines have pressured schools to put the safety of players and fans alike first.
However, I did find a primary source that provides an argument for an outright ban on rushing the court or field. Former Duke and Team USA head coach Mike Krzyzewski, who is also the NCAA Division I's all-time winningest men's coach, is a firm supporter of the NCAA implementing a firm ban on fans and students rushing the court after games. In an interview on Serious XM in 2024, Coach K had this to say, "... college kids do a lot of things and you have rules on your campus ... to make sure it doesn't go nuts, ... College basketball should come out with one set rule for men's and women's basketball and everyone does it that way." This came two weeks after one of Duke's star players hobbled off the court after being caught in a swarm of rushing fans (ESPN, 2024).
All of the primary sources have some degree of bias in their claims regarding fans rushing the field or court postgame. The two conference commissioners act as CEOs, and it is their job to oversee operations, enforce compliance, and advocate for the interests of the conference. Because of this, the commissioner will do everything in their power to have their conference be viewed as the best. In this case, both Greg Sankey and the ACC's office have an interest in making their conferences appear safe, well-managed, and professionally run. Their policy announcements around court and field storming are likely influenced by a desire to protect their conference's brand and revenue streams, not solely out of concern for player safety. This means their statements may downplay the severity of the issue or frame fines as sufficient consequences, even if stronger action might be necessary.
Similarly, Coach Mike Krzyzewski carries his own bias. As a longtime head coach at Duke, a program that frequently plays in hostile environments as a high-profile opponent, he had a direct personal and professional stake in keeping his players safe during postgame situations. His call for an outright ban came shortly after one of his own players was hurt in a court-rushing incident, meaning his statement was emotionally charged and tied to a specific negative experience. While his perspective is credible, given his decades of experience, his bias leans strongly toward player protection in a way that may not fully account for the student/fan traditions and experience arguments on the other side of the debate.
The primary evidence supporting stricter regulation is documented through Coach Krzyzewski's account of his player getting injured in a postgame court rush, alongside both the SEC and ACC announcing fines at the start of the 2025-26 academic year for schools whose fans storm the field or court. However, the fact that both conferences opted for fines rather than outright bans, and even built in exceptions like the SEC's allowance for storming if visiting teams are given a safe exit, suggests that governing bodies in the NCAA view court and field storming as a manageable risk rather than one requiring elimination.
In my opinion, storming the court or field after a major win is one of the longest-standing traditions in the NCAA, and I do think there can be greater efforts in prioritizing the safety of fans and players, but there needs to be a middle ground that keeps those two things in balance.