This past season we got two transfers who started for Davis and their was never any announcement of them joining the team.
Lamont Shamburger was still being recruited by D2 schools in June, he didn’t even tweet that he had an offer from Davis, so perhaps he walked on, but he started the first game for Davis in August.
As far as I understand a preferred walk on is still an offer from the school. Something along the lines of "we would really like for you to play for us but we don't quite have a scholarship available". Whereas a walk on is you're a freshman on campus and just walk to Plough's office and ask if you can join the team. I had a roommate freshman year who did that and actually went to a couple of practices before basically being cut.
I'm not sure if Preferred Walk-ons get better pass times for classes? They can be admitted easier and get access to practice and resources that schollie athletes get,
Great story in the New York Times today about what NIL and the so called collectives are doing to college football; I.e how a Texas lineman is making $50,000 a year to play football! Should donations to a collective be tax deductible as a 501(c)(3) non profit organization? IRS has issued a memo saying in effect “No”. Can a football collective withstand Title IX? Doubtful. I have not checked all the Big Sky programs but so far Sac, Montana and Montana state have announced that their NIL collectives are up, and running. I assume that we are eventually going to do the same. If the moral and ethical justification for NIL is that universities should not make money from an athletic program and not pay the student athletes who generate that money, what about a university that makes no money from say football or basketball players? This is not addressed in article.
I can see the point that athletes who’s name or likeness have a significant value should get some compensation for the use in marketing. But these collectives are just slush funds used to hire athletes, irrespective of marketability. Take the guys who transfer from Big Sky schools to major FBS teams for a year. They aren’t going to sell a lot of shirts and stuff because they have little name recognition with the fans of their new school.
I'm not sure if this is still accurate, but PWOs are de facto on the team (get the benefits re: admission, classes, housing) and they're like other redshirts, although some join the team in week 1, after Fall camp. "Regular" walk-ons join winter workouts after the season and try out for the team in spring. Maybe 10 would try out, and one would make it.
River, I agree and I think this is why the IRS will find that collectives do not fit the mold of 501c3. There’s nothing charitable about what they do and they are there just to be able to pay college athletes cash money. That is, cash money that helps the teams succeed and in turn make more money for the college; I.e. make more of a profit.
Well, it looks like playing football is either a job or they should have to pay for their tuition. If it is a job. The admissions go out the window and you just pay kids to play football representing the school.
It sure isn't about education anymore. So, let's not pretend.
Cal DB grad transfer, Tyson McWilliams, picks up an offer from the Ags. I would have to go back and double check, but I believe that we offered McWilliams out of high school.
His X account shows that we offered him back in May 2019. He had a lot of offers early on from the Ivies and the service academies before the bigger programs started recruiting him: San Diego State, Cal, Iowa State, Nebraska, Utah State, Hawaii, Wyoming, Colorado State, Brigham Young, Nevada and Oregon State. It's great that he has 2 years of eligibility left. He'd be a great get for the Aggies.
Santa Rosa Junior College wide receiver Isaac Torres, a first-team all-state selection for Regional 1, committed to Cal as a walk-on this week.
Torres excelled at Santa Rose JC. He caught 51 passes for 872 yards and eight touchdowns in eight games this past season, and his 109 receiving yards per game ranked third in the state.
Just watched this Fox40 interview of Caden Pinnick … he’s a 3 sport athlete (football, basketball, baseball) and wants to play all 3 in college. Is that even possible? Would Les consider something like that?