college recruiting
You become a "prospective student-athlete" when you start ninth-grade
classes. Before the ninth grade, you become a prospective student-athlete
if a college gives you (or your relatives or friends) any financial aid
or other benefits that the college does not provide to prospective students
generally.
You become a "recruited prospective student-athlete" at a particular
college if any coach or representative of the college's athletics interests
(booster or representative) approaches you (or any member of your family)
about enrolling and participating in athletics at that college. Activities
by coaches or boosters that cause you to become a recruited prospective
student-athlete are:
Providing you with an official visit;
Placing more than one telephone call to you or any other member of your
family; or
Visiting you or any other member of your family anywhere other than the
college campus.
In addition, no alumni or representatives of a college's athletics interests
(boosters or representatives) can be involved in off-campus recruiting;
however, you may receive letters from boosters, faculty members, students
and coaches on or after September 1 of your junior year. In all sports
telephone calls from coaches and faculty members are permissible on or
after June 15 before your senior year.
After this, a college coach or faculty member is limited to one telephone
call per week to you (or your parents or legal guardians), except that
unlimited calls to you (or your parents or legal guardians) may be made
under the following circumstances:
During the five days immediately before your official visit (by the college
you'll be visiting);
On the day of the coach's off-campus contact with you; and
On the initial date for signing the National Letter of Intent in your
sport through the two days after the initial signing date.
In Division II football, however, unlimited phone calls to you can be
made during a contact period and once a week outside of a contact period.
Coaches may accept collect calls and use a toll-free (1-800) number to
receive telephone calls from you (or your parents or legal guardians)
at any time.
Enrolled students (including student-athletes) may not make recruiting
telephone calls to you unless the calls are made as a part of an institution's
regular admissions program directed at all prospective students. Enrolled
students (including student-athletes) may receive telephone calls at your
expense on or after July 1 before your senior year.
You (or your family) may not receive any benefit, inducement or arrangement
such as cash, clothing, cars, improper expenses, transportation, gifts
or loans to encourage you to sign an institutional or conference letter
of intent or to attend an NCAA school.
A college coach may contact you in person off the college campus but
only on or after June 15 before your senior year.
Any face-to-face meeting between a coach and you or your parents, during
which any of you say more than "hello" is a contact. Furthermore,
any face-to-face meeting that is prearranged, or occurs at your high school
or at any competition or practice site is a contact, regardless of the
conversation. These contacts are not permissible "bumps."
In all sports, coaches may contact you off the college campus three times.
However, a coach may visit your high school (with your high-school principal's
approval) only once a week during a contact period.
An evaluation is any off-campus activity used to assess your academic
qualifications or athletics ability, including a visit to your high school
(during which no contact occurs) or watching you practice or compete at
any site.
In all sports, coaches may evaluate you an unlimited number of times.
In football and basketball only, there are specified periods when a coach
may contact you off the college campus and/or attend your practices and
games to evaluate your athletics ability.
2002-03 Contact Periods
Definitions of "Contact", "Dead", "Evaluation"
and "Quiet" Periods
2002-03 Recruiting Calendars
Football - December 1, 2002, through March 10, 2003, except for December
16 (7 a.m.) through December 18 (7 a.m.) for two-year college prospects
and February 3 (7 a.m.) through February 5, 2003 (7 a.m.), which are dead
periods.
Men's Basketball - September 7 through October 14, 2002; March 1 through
May 12, 2003, except for April 3 through April 8, 2003 (noon), and April
14 (7 a.m.) through April 16, 2003 (7 a.m.), which are dead periods.
Women's Basketball - September 7 through October 14, 2002; March 1 through
May 12, 2003, except for April 14 (7 a.m.) through April 16, 2003 (7 a.m.),
which is a dead period.
2002-03 Evaluation Periods
Definitions of "Contact", "Dead", "Evaluation"
and "Quiet" Periods
2002-03 Recruiting Calendars
Football - During any contact period; May 1 through May 31, 2002; the
period between the prospect's initial and final football contests; November
1 through November 30, 2002; during any high-school all-star game that
occurs in the state where the college is located; May 1 through May 31,
2003.
Men's Basketball - During any contact period; June 15 through August
1, 2002; the period between the prospect's initial and final basketball
contests; during any high-school all-star game that occurs in the state
where the college is located.
Women's Basketball - During any contact period; during any sanctioned
AAU competition between May 18 and June 14, 2002; June 15 through August
1, 2002; the period between the prospect's initial and final basketball
contests; during any high-school all-star game that occurs in the state
where the college is located.
[Note: There is a "dead" period (coaches may not contact or
evaluate you on or off the college campus) in all sports 48 hours before
7 a.m. on the initial signing date for the National Letter of Intent.]
With the permission of your high school's director of athletics, you
may try out for a college team before enrollment. The tryout must occur
in a term other than the term in which the traditional season in the sport
occurs or after your high-school eligibility is completed and may include
tests to evaluate your strength, speed, agility and sports skills. Except
in football, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer and wrestling, the tryout may
include competition.
You can visit a college campus any time at your expense. On such a visit,
you may receive three complimentary admissions to a game on that campus,
a tour of off-campus practice and competition sites in your sport and
other facilities within 30 miles of the campus, and a meal for you and
your parents or guardians in the college's on-campus student dining facilities.
Official Visits
During your senior year, you can have one expense-paid (official) visit
to a particular campus. You may receive no more than a total of five such
visits. This restriction applies even if you are being recruited in more
than one sport. A college may not give you an official visit unless you
have provided it with a PSAT, ACT or SAT score from a test taken on a
national testing date under national testing conditions.
During your official visit (which may not exceed 48 hours), you may receive
round-trip transportation between your home (or high school) and the campus,
and you (and your parents) may receive meals and lodging. You also may
receive three complimentary admissions to campus athletics events. In
addition, a student host may help you (and your family) become acquainted
with campus life. The host may spend $30 per day to cover costs of entertaining
you (and your parents, legal guardians or spouse); however, the money
cannot be used to purchase college souvenirs such as T-shirts or other
college mementos.
Printed Materials
A Division II college recruiting you may provide to you printed recruiting
materials on or after September 1 at the beginning of your junior year.
In addition, a Division II college may show you a highlight film/videotape,
but may not send it to you or leave it with you or your coach.
Finally, a Division II college also may provide you with a questionnaire,
camp brochure and educational information published by the NCAA (such
as this guide) at any time. |