SJU will never sue the NCAA. The consequences are too severe long term even if it wins. Sanchez could. But it will take years to resolve--he does not have the time to see it to conclusion. It will also take legal fees. SJU can't pay those fees for a student. If Sanchez gets the funds from a third party, that raises eligibility issues of its own. So the only course is what Orr is doing. Media pressure (which is already happening), rational arguments, equity, cajoling and subtle not explicit threats to sue. The deck is stacked against the player and the school. Even if Sanchez sued and won a preliminary injunction allowing him to play pending a trial on the merits down the road--years down the road the way our trial system works---the school can't take the chance and allow him to play because if the trial ultimately goes against Sanchez, and he is ruled ineligible, SJU would forfeit all its wins and all the revenues it gained during the games Sanchez played. Those are the facts.