Consider LeBron James unhappy with the NCAA.

The collegiate governing body unveiled an agent certification program that will begin this month to help athletes who want to test the waters surrounding the NBA draft, and the rules for it don’t seem to favor James’ superagent Rich Paul.

As reported by CBS Sports, the first qualification is that the agent must have a bachelor’s degree, something Paul famously never got while building his Klutch Sports empire. Other criteria include being certified with the NBPA for a minimum of three years and taking an in-person exam at the NCAA Office in Indianapolis.

Paul, who gained plenty of notoriety this offseason in reshaping the NBA landscape through clients like James, Anthony Davis, Draymond Green, Ben Simmons and others, won’t be eligible to represent prospective NBA players coming from the NCAA ranks.

James quickly dubbed it the “Rich Paul Rule” and took to Twitter to slam the process.

It’s unclear if the NCAA was specifically trying to target Paul with the measures, though that hasn’t stopped James and other NBA players from insinuating that’s the case.