NCAA Compliance
Catawba College Athletics NCAA Compliance
Catawba College is proud of its coaches, parents and boosters for all that they do on a yearly basis to provide for an excellent student-athlete experience while representing our institution. We are equally proud of our student-athletes in competition, the classroom, and in the local community as they support the stated missions of Catawba College. NCAA Rules Compliance is vital to our continued success. Within this website information is posted on various topics and we hope that you will find the answers that you are looking for.
Name, Image, and Likeness Policy
Current Student-Athletes
- Summary of NCAA Regulations
- NCAA Student-Athlete Statement
- NCAA Drug Testing Consent Form
- NCAA Eligibilty Form and Checklist
- NCAA Instructions for Financial Aid Form
- NCAA Banned Drug List
Prospective Student Athletes
The NCAA defines a prospective student-athlete (“prospect”) as any student who has started classes for the ninth grade. In addition, a student who has not started classes for the ninth grade becomes a prospective student-athlete, if the institution provides such an individual (or the individual’s relatives or friends) any financial assistance or other benefits that the institution does not provide to prospective students generally.
An individual remains a prospective student-athlete until one of the following occurs (whichever occurs earlier): (a) The individual officially registers and enrolls in a minimum full-time program of studies and attends classes in any term of a four-year collegiate institution’s regular academic term (excluding summer); or (b) The individual participates in a regular-squad practice or competition at a four-year collegiate institution.
- College Bound Student-Athlete Guide
- NCAA Initial Eligibility Center
- NCAA Initial Eligibility Center Brochure
- National Letter of Intent
- General Recruiting Definitions
Other useful links:
Transfer Student-Athletes
Student-athletes transferring from an NCAA or NAIA four-year institution will need to obtain a letter granting another four-year institution Permission to Contact you from your current institution’s Compliance office before you can communicate with coaches at another NCAA institution.
Student-athletes transferring from a two-year college are not required to obtain Permission to Contact from their current athletic department; however, it is a good idea to discuss choices to contact other institutions with his/her current coach. Also, student-athletes will need to register with the Eligibility Center so an amateurism decision can be made. Information regarding registration and amateurism is available at www.eligibilitycenter.org.
A “representative of athletics interests” (“booster”) is an individual who is known (or should have been known) by a member of the institution’s executive or athletics administration to:
(a) Have participated in or to be a member of any agency or organization, including corporate entities (e.g., apparel and equipment companies), promoting the institution’s intercollegiate athletics program;
(b) Have made financial contributions to the athletics department or to an athletics booster organization of that institution;
(c) Be assisting or to have been requested (by athletics department staff) to assist in the recruitment of prospects;
(d) Be assisting or to have assisted in providing benefits to enrolled student-athletes or their families; or
(e) Have been involved otherwise in promoting the institution’s athletics program.
Note: Once an individual is identified as such a representative, the person retains that identity indefinitely.
NCAA Rules and You
Representatives of an institution’s athletics interests are prohibited from making in-person, off-campus recruiting contacts or telephone calls with a prospect or the prospect’s relatives or legal guardians. On-campus contact is permitted, as are written communications. Recruiting contacts by representatives during a prospect’s official visit are confined to campus. General exceptions: 1) Contacts made with the prospect by an established family friend or neighbor, it being understood that such contacts are not made for recruiting purposes and are not initiated by a member of an institution’s coaching staff; and 2) An unavoidable incidental contact made with the prospect by representatives of the institution’s athletics interests, provided the contact is not prearranged by the representative or an athletics department staff member, does not take place on the grounds of the prospect’s educational institution or at the sites of organized competition and practice involving the prospect or the prospect’s team, is not made for the purpose of recruitment of the prospect, and involves only normal civility.
Other restrictions are:
An athletics representative may view a prospect’s athletics contest on his/her own initiative, subject to the understanding that the athletics representative may not contact the prospect on such occasions. An athletics representative may not contact a prospect’s coach, principal or counselor in an attempt to evaluate the prospect. An athletics representative may not visit a prospect’s educational institution to pick-up film/videotape or transcripts pertaining to the evaluation of the prospect’s academic eligibility of athletics ability.
Please feel free to identify outstanding student-athletes that our coaches would be interested in. Do this by sending newspaper clippings or calling our coaches—they’ll take it from there.
What is an extra benefit?
As a general rule, the student-athlete shall not receive any extra benefit. An extra benefit is any special arrangement by an institutional employee or a representative of the institution’s athletics interests to provide a student-athlete or the student-athlete’s relative or friend a benefit not expressly authorized by NCAA legislation.
Permissible benefits include, but are not limited to:
1) Loan from established family member. A student-athlete may receive a loan from an established family friend without such arrangement constituting an extra benefit, provided:
(a) The loan is not offered to the student-athlete based on any degree on his/her athletics ability or reputation;
(b) The individual providing the loan is NOT considered a representative of the institution’s athletics interests; and
(c) the relationship between the individual providing the loan and the student-athlete existed before the initiation of the student-athlete’s recruitment by the member institution.
2) Occasional meals. A student-athlete or the entire team in a sport may receive an occasional family home meal from an institutional staff member or representative of athletics interests as long as the meal is provided in an individual’s home and the meal is restricted to infrequent and special occasions.
Nonpermissible benefits include, but are not limited to:
1) Professional Sports Tickets. An institution or any representative of its athletics interests may not purchase or otherwise obtain tickets to a professional sports contest and make these tickets available to student-athletes enrolled in an NCAA member institution.
2) Expenses for Visits by Friends and Relatives. An institution or any of its athletics representatives may not provide payment of any expenses (e.g., room, board, transportation) for friends or relatives to visit the student-athlete at the institution where he or she is enrolled.
3) Discounts and Credits. A student-athlete may not receive a special discount, payment arrangement or credit on a purchase or a service from an institutional staff member or a representative of athletics interests.
Other prohibited benefits include, but are not limited to:
1) A loan of money;
2) A guarantee of bond;
3) The use of an automobile; or
4) Signing or cosigning a note with an outside agency to arrange a loan.
Any provision of an EXTRA BENEFIT to a prospective or currently enrolled student-athlete by an institutional staff member or athletics representative jeopardizes the athletics eligibility of that student-athlete. We urge you not to provide a prospective or enrolled student-athlete with any benefit without contacting the Compliance Office to determine the permissibility of your actions.