Sports Scholarships An Insiders Guide

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Interdepartmental Communications 149


One strategy being employed is to invite regular students that


might have an interest in an athletic program to “walk-on.”


These “walk-on” students are then listed on the team rosters


and their names, as well as their financial aid packages, are


included in the rosters sent to the NCAA. Often, the “walk-on”


financial aid package is smaller than the recruited athletes. A


significant portion of those “walk-ons” leave the team after


a time, yet their financial aid packages remain in the NCAA


files. Other rule circumventions continue to be quietly dis-


cussed and tried. But the most successful strategy, as described


by a Division III lacrosse coach in the NCAA News, “Colleges


just buy athletes for their programs. It’s become especially true


for athletes with good academic credentials...” (Being a good


student evidently has its rewards.)


The Division III Management Council also recommended


to the Division III President’s Council that institutions report-


ing no Level II (minor infractions) violations at the end of an


academic year be required to certify that no violation occurred.


This appears to be a thinly veiled attempt to force Division III


institutions to improve their self-monitoring and self-reporting


obligations to the NCAA.


It should be clear that the NCAA is attempting to regulate


financial aid awards to student athletes enrolling in Division


III institutions. It should be equally as clear that student ath-


letes enrolling in those colleges can and do receive significant


financial aid, in addition to other benefits. The NCAA creates


the parameters within which Division III colleges are supposed


to operate. Within those parameters, each institution makes


its own individual, unique financial aid award decisions. Very


often, decisions to award financial aid dramatically stretch


and often break the recruiting rules and regulations.

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