Talkingcommunities
New member
What is the name of your state? Florida
Would the following scenario make a student-athlete ineligible per NCAA rules:
1. Athlete joins a club in their sport. To join the club, they must pass a tryout, like every club does. However, if the athlete passes the tryout, there are no "fees". The practices, games, uniforms, travel, and potential room/board are paid for by the club.
2. Once the athlete becomes part of the club, their parents and athlete sign a "future agent" contract. The club will act as the "agent" for the athlete if/when the athlete decides to pursue a professional career. Until that decision is made, the club will not pursue professional team tryouts or drafts, etc. on behalf of the athlete.
Here is what a typical case would look like:
The athlete tries out and makes the club at age 15. The parents/athlete sign a 10-year contract which would bind the athlete to the club, should he decide to go professional and the club would become the acting agent. That decision is up to the athlete to decide and until then, the club will simply act like any other club, providing coaching, training, games, etc. Athletes from outside the local area may also live at the club and would be provided room/board and use of a laptop for virtual school.
The question is: is there any way for a club to provide opportunities to athletes that cannot afford the expensive club fees we all know exist and still allow them to remain eligible for college athletics in the same sport? And obviously, any organization that would provide such service without charging the parents of the athlete needs to be able to recoup the investment in some way, thus the concept of the "future agent contract", should any of the players turn out to be good enough to turn professional down the road.
Sorry the explanation is long, but I wanted to provide as much detail as possible so the responses would be relevant.
Would the following scenario make a student-athlete ineligible per NCAA rules:
1. Athlete joins a club in their sport. To join the club, they must pass a tryout, like every club does. However, if the athlete passes the tryout, there are no "fees". The practices, games, uniforms, travel, and potential room/board are paid for by the club.
2. Once the athlete becomes part of the club, their parents and athlete sign a "future agent" contract. The club will act as the "agent" for the athlete if/when the athlete decides to pursue a professional career. Until that decision is made, the club will not pursue professional team tryouts or drafts, etc. on behalf of the athlete.
Here is what a typical case would look like:
The athlete tries out and makes the club at age 15. The parents/athlete sign a 10-year contract which would bind the athlete to the club, should he decide to go professional and the club would become the acting agent. That decision is up to the athlete to decide and until then, the club will simply act like any other club, providing coaching, training, games, etc. Athletes from outside the local area may also live at the club and would be provided room/board and use of a laptop for virtual school.
The question is: is there any way for a club to provide opportunities to athletes that cannot afford the expensive club fees we all know exist and still allow them to remain eligible for college athletics in the same sport? And obviously, any organization that would provide such service without charging the parents of the athlete needs to be able to recoup the investment in some way, thus the concept of the "future agent contract", should any of the players turn out to be good enough to turn professional down the road.
Sorry the explanation is long, but I wanted to provide as much detail as possible so the responses would be relevant.