Crimson Kid
1/14/2011, 10:13 AM
If you were a student athlete could you stay out of trouble with the NCAA?
http://www.midwestsportsfans.com/2011/01/quiz-could-you-stay-eligible-for-college-athletics/
Looks like could but i missed 3 chances at things i could do.
Post your results.
0-Violations
3 - Missed Opportunity's
1.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You didn’t accept a free trip home to be honored at your high school and you missed a great event for no reason!
16.1.7.1 Hometown Awards. A hometown group may pay reasonable and necessary expenses of a student- athlete returning home to receive an award for athletics accomplishments.
2.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You turned down $30 from your coach to cover extra costs coming from showing around a potential recruit. Too bad — the NCAA rules say taking that money is OK, as long as you don’t use it to buy souvenirs.
13.6.7.5 Student Host. The student host must be either a current student-athlete or a student designated in a manner consistent with the institution’s policy for providing campus visits or tours to prospective students in general. The institution may provide the following to a student host entertaining a prospective student-athlete: (a) A maximum of $30 for each day of the visit to cover all actual costs of entertaining the student host(s) and the prospective student-athlete (and the prospective student-athlete’s parents, legal guardians or spouse), excluding the cost of meals and admission to campus athletics events. The cost of entertainment of the institution’s athletics department staff members who accompany the prospective student-athlete is also excluded. If an athletics department staff member serves as the prospective student-athlete’s host, his or her entertainment costs must be included in the entertainment allowance. The entertainment allowance may not be used for the purchase of souvenirs, such as T-shirts or other institutional mementos. It is permissible to provide the student host with an additional $15 per day for each additional prospective student-athlete the host entertains.
3.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You turned down $30 from your coach to cover extra costs coming from showing around a potential recruit. Too bad — the NCAA rules say taking that money is OK, as long as you don’t use it to buy souvenirs.
13.6.7.5 Student Host. The student host must be either a current student-athlete or a student designated in a manner consistent with the institution’s policy for providing campus visits or tours to prospective students in general. The institution may provide the following to a student host entertaining a prospective student-athlete: (a) A maximum of $30 for each day of the visit to cover all actual costs of entertaining the student host(s) and the prospective student-athlete (and the prospective student-athlete’s parents, legal guardians or spouse), excluding the cost of meals and admission to campus athletics events. The cost of entertainment of the institution’s athletics department staff members who accompany the prospective student-athlete is also excluded. If an athletics department staff member serves as the prospective student-athlete’s host, his or her entertainment costs must be included in the entertainment allowance. The entertainment allowance may not be used for the purchase of souvenirs, such as T-shirts or other institutional mementos. It is permissible to provide the student host with an additional $15 per day for each additional prospective student-athlete the host entertains.
Congratulations! You walked the straight and narrow, NCAA-style. Combine that compliance with your talents, and you’re a first-round draft pick in the NFL. Nicely done.
I wanna get paid and nothing offered could top what the NFL would pay me.
http://www.midwestsportsfans.com/2011/01/quiz-could-you-stay-eligible-for-college-athletics/
Looks like could but i missed 3 chances at things i could do.
Post your results.
0-Violations
3 - Missed Opportunity's
1.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You didn’t accept a free trip home to be honored at your high school and you missed a great event for no reason!
16.1.7.1 Hometown Awards. A hometown group may pay reasonable and necessary expenses of a student- athlete returning home to receive an award for athletics accomplishments.
2.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You turned down $30 from your coach to cover extra costs coming from showing around a potential recruit. Too bad — the NCAA rules say taking that money is OK, as long as you don’t use it to buy souvenirs.
13.6.7.5 Student Host. The student host must be either a current student-athlete or a student designated in a manner consistent with the institution’s policy for providing campus visits or tours to prospective students in general. The institution may provide the following to a student host entertaining a prospective student-athlete: (a) A maximum of $30 for each day of the visit to cover all actual costs of entertaining the student host(s) and the prospective student-athlete (and the prospective student-athlete’s parents, legal guardians or spouse), excluding the cost of meals and admission to campus athletics events. The cost of entertainment of the institution’s athletics department staff members who accompany the prospective student-athlete is also excluded. If an athletics department staff member serves as the prospective student-athlete’s host, his or her entertainment costs must be included in the entertainment allowance. The entertainment allowance may not be used for the purchase of souvenirs, such as T-shirts or other institutional mementos. It is permissible to provide the student host with an additional $15 per day for each additional prospective student-athlete the host entertains.
3.MISSED OPPORTUNITY! You turned down $30 from your coach to cover extra costs coming from showing around a potential recruit. Too bad — the NCAA rules say taking that money is OK, as long as you don’t use it to buy souvenirs.
13.6.7.5 Student Host. The student host must be either a current student-athlete or a student designated in a manner consistent with the institution’s policy for providing campus visits or tours to prospective students in general. The institution may provide the following to a student host entertaining a prospective student-athlete: (a) A maximum of $30 for each day of the visit to cover all actual costs of entertaining the student host(s) and the prospective student-athlete (and the prospective student-athlete’s parents, legal guardians or spouse), excluding the cost of meals and admission to campus athletics events. The cost of entertainment of the institution’s athletics department staff members who accompany the prospective student-athlete is also excluded. If an athletics department staff member serves as the prospective student-athlete’s host, his or her entertainment costs must be included in the entertainment allowance. The entertainment allowance may not be used for the purchase of souvenirs, such as T-shirts or other institutional mementos. It is permissible to provide the student host with an additional $15 per day for each additional prospective student-athlete the host entertains.
Congratulations! You walked the straight and narrow, NCAA-style. Combine that compliance with your talents, and you’re a first-round draft pick in the NFL. Nicely done.
I wanna get paid and nothing offered could top what the NFL would pay me.