Ivy League alumni are proud of the standards of excellence
in academics and athletics that are a tradition of each
institution. Of equal value is the fact that student-athletes are
full members of the student body, with no special privileges like
athletic scholarships. In the Ivy League, conducting our programs
with integrity is very important.
Please read the following to learn how you can help carry on
this tradition.
College Athletics the Right Way:
THE RULES
As part of the team, you must know the rules of the game.
Carrying on the Ivy tradition of excellence is hard work, and
competition among the best institutions is intense. Searching for a
competitive edge is part of the challenge, and we know that you
want to help your favorite institution and be part of a winning
team. Meeting those challenges means playing by the rules. The NCAA
has rules for coaches, players, and YOU!
NCAA Rule: Who is governed by the rules?
Members of an institution's staff, student-athletes, and other
individuals and groups representing the institution's athletic
interests shall comply with the Association rules, and the member
institution shall be responsible for such compliance.
Interpretation: This means that the school you support is
responsible for making sure that anyone involved with its athletics
program knows the rules that apply to them. The school will be held
accountable for any rule broken by anyone representing it.
NCAA Rule: Do NCAA rules apply to me?
You are considered a representative of your institution's athletic
interests just by being an alumnus, friend or donor.
Interpretation: This means that any contact you have with current
or prospective student-athletes at your institution can affect the
eligibility of your institution's individual student-athletes and
teams to compete in NCAA and Ivy competition.
PROSPECTS
All recruiting of prospective student-athletes must be done by
institutional staff members.
NCAA Rule: Who is a "Prospect"?
A "prospect" is any student who has started classes for the ninth
grade.
Interpretation: This means that recruiting any student who has
started classes for the ninth grade is subject to NCAA rules.
NCAA Rule: Contacting Prospects
Representatives of an institution's athletic interests are
prohibited from having any contact with prospective
student-athletes.
Interpretation: You may not have contact with a prospect or his or
her parents, on or off campus, in person, by telephone or in
writing.
One Limited Exception: Student-athletes do not have to be treated
differently than other applicants in the admissions process. If you
are a member of your institution's Alumni Schools Committee and are
assigned to interview students who are also athletes you may
contact the student for these purposes, but for these purposes
only! Alumni Schools Committee members may not have contact with
prospects whom they are not assigned to interview.
Another Limited Exception: If a family friend or neighbor is a
"prospect" then you may continue to maintain this relationship,
however you may never have a recruiting conversation.
EXTRA BENEFITS
Prospective and enrolled student-athletes may not be given extra
benefits.
NCAA Rule: What is an Extra Benefit?
An extra benefit includes the provision of any transportation,
meals, housing, clothes, service, entertainment, or other benefit
not available to all students who are not athletes.
Interpretation: This means that under no circumstances may you
provide an individual prospect or enrolled student-athlete with any
of these benefits. You may never take an individual or small group
of athletes or prospects to a restaurant for a meal. However, teams
which are visiting your area for competition may be provided with
meals while on a team trip.
Prospect's trips to campus must be financed by the athletic
department under very specific guidelines, and invitations for such
trips may only be made by coaches. Contact the Athletic Director if
you would like to contribute to a fund which is used for this
purpose.
One Limited Exception: You may invite enrolled student-athletes
for a meal in your home, but not in a restaurant, however. This may
be done only infrequently and on special occasions. It is also
permissible for you to provide transportation to student-athletes
to attend a meal in your home. Make sure you have the Athletic
Director's permission before extending an invitation.
HOW YOU CAN HELP...
* Join a Friends Group /Sport Association
These groups provide support for teams through funding for special
team trips, recruiting, and hosting receptions for teams at home
and away contests. This is the best way to help your team of
choice, and you'll be kept up to date on their progress throughout
the year.
* Identify Outstanding Student-Athletes
If you know of outstanding student-athletes in your area, send
information such as newspaper clippings to the coaches at your
favorite institution, or give the coaches a call, and let them take
it from there. Reminder -- You may not contact prospects directly,
nor may you contact high school coaches or guidance counselors to
get information onprospects, but there is no rule against attending
their contests.
* Offer Assistance to the Coaching Staff
You may provide lodging, meals and transportation to coaches when
they come to your community to contact and evaluate prospects.
* Provide Summer Jobs and Internships
If you know of positions in your business or community which might
be filled by a student-athlete then contact the athletic director
for names of those who might be qualified. Reminder -- The pay for
these jobs must be at the going rate for that position.
THE IVY LEAGUE
The formal agreement which founded the Ivy League as an athletic
conference was signed by the presidents of the eight institutions
in February 1954. The basic intent of the original agreement was to
improve and foster intercollegiate athletics while keeping the
emphasis on such competition in harmony with the educational
purpose of the institutions.
While football is where it started, the Ivy League now crowns
champions in 33 sports and continues to sponsor intercollegiate
programs of national prominence for women and men.
Ivy teams have enjoyed tremendous success in NCAA championships,
winning recent national championships in several men's and women's
sports, including field hockey, rowing, ice hockey, fencing,
lacrosse and squash. Ivy champions in baseball, basketball, field
hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball and volleyball have automatic
entries in the NCAA tournament, and teams in field hockey, lacrosse
and soccer have reached the final four.
For further information on NCAA rules, especially those
relating to contact between alumni and student-athletes or
prospective student-athletes, please contact the athletic
department of your institution.
Presidents' Statement from June 20, 2002:
At its regular spring meeting on June 17, 2002, the Council of
Ivy Group Presidents took three actions that are designed to assure
close adherence to the fundamental tenets of Ivy League
athletics.
“The Council’s actions will continue the Ivy League
tradition of strong athletic competition which is, in the words of
the original 1954 Ivy Agreement, ‘kept in harmony with the
essential purposes of [each Ivy League] institution,’”
said Hunter R. Rawlings III, President of Cornell
University and Chair of the Council.
These values are encapsulated in the first of the ten
“Principles” adopted by the Council in 1979, on the
25th anniversary of the original Ivy Presidents’ agreement:
“Intercollegiate athletics ought to be maintained within a
perspective that holds paramount the academic programs of the
institution and the academic and personal growth of the student
athlete.”
In service of this principle, the Council has since the early
1980’s regulated the numbers of recruited student-athletes in
certain sports at Ivy League schools, and limited the scope of
permissible athletic activities more narrowly than do NCAA Division
I regulations. The Council’s current actions build on this
structure in three ways.
1. Beginning in fall 2002, each school will establish for each
sport, periods of at least seven weeks during the academic year
when intercollegiate athletes will have no required athletic
activities and in which there will be no coaching supervision of
voluntary conditioning or other athletic activities. These periods
will supplement current Ivy restrictions, which include a
prohibition on competition during examination periods, as well as
significantly fewer practice sessions in
’non-traditional’ seasons than are permitted by all
other Division I institutions.
2. Effective with the class of 2007, which will be admitted in
2002-03 and will matriculate in fall 2003, the number of students
recruited to play football who may matriculate at any Ivy school in
any four year period will be reduced from 140 to 120, a reduction
in the annual average of such students from 35 to 30. Also
effective in fall 2003, the number of institutional football
coaches permitted under Ivy rules will change from 6 full-time and
6 part-time to 7 full-time and 3 part-time.
3. The Council will undertake further data collection and
analysis, and review of Ivy policies, in response to its concern
that the admission of recruited student-athletes to Ivy League
institutions remains faithful to core Ivy League principles.
“The review that we are undertaking will strengthen our
commitment to the opportunity for a positive Ivy League athletic
experience, within the context -- and serving the goals -- of a
liberal undergraduate education,” said President
Rawlings.
Rawlings also noted that the Council of Presidents had benefited
in its discussions from substantial efforts made by the Ivy League
Directors of Athletics over the past year to produce
recommendations in these areas, as the Council had requested in
fall 2001.
The Ivy League was established by the Ivy Presidents’
Agreement in 1954 and began formal competition in the 1956-57
academic year. It is comprised of Brown, Columbia and Cornell
Universities, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, the University
of Pennsylvania, and Princeton and Yale Universities.