Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

welcomeaboutaboutcontact us
Athlete Photo Gallery

Welcome, Guest!

(Log in / Register)

image

COMMISSION REPORTS

View All Reports

Keeping Faith with the Student Athlete
The Knight Commission's Groundbreaking Report

A Call to Action
A Call to Action: Reconnecting College Sports and Higher Education

COMMISSION MEETINGS

PUBLISHED OP-EDS

Los Angeles Times
Aug. 30, 2008

Miami Herald
Feb. 4, 2007

Indianapolis Star
Apr. 2, 2006

COMMISSIONED RESEARCH AND POLLS

WHITE PAPERS

Athletics Recruiting and Academic Values: Enhancing Transparency, Spreading Risk and Improving Practice
University of Georgia Institute for Higher Education

Challenging the Myth
A Review of the Links Among College Athletic Success, Student Quality and Donations by Robert H. Frank

Executive Summary Division I-A Postseason History and Status

Division I-A Postseason History and Status
by John Sandbrook

Clemson cornerback awarded waiver to care for brother

When the paper originally published the story on August 19, many people contacted the paper and Clemson’s athletic department with offers of assistance. However, Clemson compliance director Stephanie Ellison stated the Atlantic Coast Conference initially told the school that McElrathbey was prohibited from receiving any sort of monetary assistance.  Ellison said the only option was filing a waiver with the NCAA that would allow for athletic department members and their families to assist McElrathbey by helping with day care, rides to and from school, and other non-monetary support.  Such a waiver had only been previously made for athletes involving family deaths.  Clemson and the ACC sent the waiver request to the NCAA last week.

The paper reports that the NCAA has approved a waiver that “will allow for a trust fund covering his brother’s normal living expenses.” and that McElrathbey will also be able to take advantage of “university staff and family” to provide transportation and child care for Fahmarr, who is in sixth grade.  The NCAA and the ACC were both criticized after the conference initially ruled out the trust fund.  Although NCAA rules prohibit athletes from receiving “extra benefits,” it has relaxed its rules to accomodate for McElrathbey’s request.

When McElrathbey learned he had been granted the waiver, he stated, “I knew with all the publicity about it that something had to be done, or it was going to cause some real bad vibes with people,” McElrathbey said Monday night. “Thank God it worked out.”

Posted on 9/13/06 in StudentsEducatorsFootballPermalink