The NCAA appears to have earned more enemies than supporters for a long-awaited list of rule changes to college basketball.

The NCAA, before revealing the amendments that mainly focused on players’ rights to agents, failed to inform the two parties affected by the rules, USA Basketball and the NBA, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. The organizations reportedly felt “blindsided” by NCAA President Mark Emmert’s announcement Wednesday.

The NBA and USA Basketball’s compliance with the rules is crucial since the NCAA now expects them to change their course of action. The rules call on USA Basketball to choose which high school prospects before their senior year are part of the “elite” class, and then only those players are eligible to hire an agent beginning July 1 of each year. But USA Basketball, according to Wojnarowski, doesn’t have the interest or resources to carry out that task.

Furthermore, the NBA now can lose prospects back to college, as the rules allow players who enter the draft and are not selected to return to school. The problem is the NBA and NBA Players’ Association have not reached a consensus of their own on the change, NBA spokesman Tim Frank acknowledged.

“We will review the NCAA’s planned reforms and continue to assess, along with our Players’ Association, the potential for any related NBA rules changes,” Frank said.

The two sides weren’t alone in taking immediate issue with the NCAA’s new mandates. Agents are skeptical of the NCAA involving USA Basketball, while many coaches feel the changes unveiled Wednesday wouldn’t do much to fix the sport’s biggest problem — which, to most, is the NCAA not allowing players to get a piece of the monetary pie.