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Post by vballer97 on Oct 12, 2015 23:05:35 GMT -5
Seriously? As a freshman?? I wouldn't expected that You would if you saw him play in high school. UCLA also gave Ma'a 100% so more than a third of there total scholarships are in 2 guys. And im sure they had to give Stahl a lot to get him there. I don't know how they make it, but some teams cheat.. Also academic money can add up.
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Post by vbsocal56 on Oct 12, 2015 23:50:32 GMT -5
You would if you saw him play in high school. UCLA also gave Ma'a 100% so more than a third of there total scholarships are in 2 guys. And im sure they had to give Stahl a lot to get him there. I don't know how they make it, but some teams cheat.. Also academic money can add up. you cannot receive athletic and academic scholarship. That's how Pepperdine got all of its wins and Final Four Appearances vacated a few years ago
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Post by vballer97 on Oct 12, 2015 23:51:53 GMT -5
I don't know how they make it, but some teams cheat.. Also academic money can add up. you cannot receive athletic and academic scholarship. That's how Pepperdine got all of its wins and Final Four Appearances vacated a few years ago Wow. A lot of guys on my team have it.
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Post by hardworkwins on Oct 13, 2015 0:01:31 GMT -5
Not true that rule has been revoked it is all ok now. I'm not sure when but it was a few years ago
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Post by 10Footbounce on Oct 13, 2015 1:04:41 GMT -5
you cannot receive athletic and academic scholarship. That's how Pepperdine got all of its wins and Final Four Appearances vacated a few years ago Wow. A lot of guys on my team have it. What team are you on
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cadf
Sophomore
Posts: 142
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Post by cadf on Oct 13, 2015 8:46:06 GMT -5
Sports that are not fully funded can couple academic money and athletic money. I would say the majority of scholarship MVB players get around ~25% athletic money. The prime-timers get ~50%, and the great exceptions get higher. Most all will receive additional funding in academic scholarship, academic "fellowships", work study, etc.
If a team has 3-4 prime-timers and 8-12 25%s that should fall in the 4.5 range.
Of course schools like UCLA with loads of local in state talent that get in state tuition can entice out of state prime-timers with more $
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Oct 13, 2015 11:46:18 GMT -5
UCLA still is not cheap, even for California residents, as living on-campus is around $33,000 per year. Living off-campus is not much better at $29,000 per year. I know that schools will change their players scholarships year to year based on the talent coming in. So where a player got 75% in their first two years, they may drop to 50% in the final two years. Most coaches are very up front about this when recruiting their athletes.
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Post by new2vb on Oct 14, 2015 12:56:56 GMT -5
The way NCAA scholarships work for volleyball is 4 1/2 scholarships. Which means one person could get a full 100% and someone could get 10% of a scholarship. With that being said, who do you think in the past years got more than 75% of a scholarship for D1-D2 volleyball. I'm thinking; Micah Christenson, James Shaw, maybe TJ Defalco, and Taylor Sander. pretty sure Defalco is on 100%
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Post by 10Footbounce on Oct 14, 2015 12:57:39 GMT -5
The way NCAA scholarships work for volleyball is 4 1/2 scholarships. Which means one person could get a full 100% and someone could get 10% of a scholarship. With that being said, who do you think in the past years got more than 75% of a scholarship for D1-D2 volleyball. I'm thinking; Micah Christenson, James Shaw, maybe TJ Defalco, and Taylor Sander. pretty sure Defalco is on 100% I mean yeah he should be
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Post by eastcoastball on Oct 14, 2015 18:37:37 GMT -5
I think Brett Rosenmeier to Hawaii got around 75%
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Post by volletrain on Oct 21, 2015 21:19:06 GMT -5
Many schools find ways to reduce the tuition burden even with the 4.5 cap from the NCAA.
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Post by 10Footbounce on Oct 21, 2015 21:40:08 GMT -5
Many schools have endowments for volleyball players. Big schools, with many alumni, will create a scholarship for a certain type of student. It might just so happen that to qualify for these various scholarships you "might" have to play volleyball. etc... So, many big schools can provide many more than the 4.5 cap from the NCAA. No NCAA only allows 4.5 scholarships for men's volleyball because of title 9, where football can give a lot of scholarships, girls volleyball can give 12 and girls basketball can give 15, men's volleyball can only give 4.5 because of title 9 and all the opportunities football gets to give out. Shane Davis told me this directly.
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Post by volleyball11 on Oct 22, 2015 8:31:33 GMT -5
Many schools have endowments for volleyball players. Big schools, with many alumni, will create a scholarship for a certain type of student. It might just so happen that to qualify for these various scholarships you "might" have to play volleyball. etc... So, many big schools can provide many more than the 4.5 cap from the NCAA. No NCAA only allows 4.5 scholarships for men's volleyball because of title 9, where football can give a lot of scholarships, girls volleyball can give 12 and girls basketball can give 15, men's volleyball can only give 4.5 because of title 9 and all the opportunities football gets to give out. Shane Davis told me this directly. While the school can only give out 4.5 scholarships, players themselves can apply for separate scholarships or grants that the school does not give them for athletics. So while the volleyball program pnly gives out 4.5 athletic scholarship, there can be other ones, labeled non athletic, that the players can apply for. Such as one set up by an alumni or association that has a requirement of playing volleyball.
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Post by Voleibol!!!!!! on Oct 22, 2015 11:41:09 GMT -5
No NCAA only allows 4.5 scholarships for men's volleyball because of title 9, where football can give a lot of scholarships, girls volleyball can give 12 and girls basketball can give 15, men's volleyball can only give 4.5 because of title 9 and all the opportunities football gets to give out. Shane Davis told me this directly. While the school can only give out 4.5 scholarships, players themselves can apply for separate scholarships or grants that the school does not give them for athletics. So while the volleyball program pnly gives out 4.5 athletic scholarship, there can be other ones, labeled non athletic, that the players can apply for. Such as one set up by an alumni or association that has a requirement of playing volleyball. I'm not sure on this, but wouldn't any sort of money awarded to an athlete for their sport regardless where it comes from count towards the 4.5 scholarship limit? In addition, if an athlete received academic money they must maintain a certain GPA in order for the academic aid to NOT be counted against a schools/programs scholarship limit.
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Post by vballer97 on Oct 22, 2015 11:51:23 GMT -5
Many schools have endowments for volleyball players. Big schools, with many alumni, will create a scholarship for a certain type of student. It might just so happen that to qualify for these various scholarships you "might" have to play volleyball. etc... So, many big schools can provide many more than the 4.5 cap from the NCAA. No NCAA only allows 4.5 scholarships for men's volleyball because of title 9, where football can give a lot of scholarships, girls volleyball can give 12 and girls basketball can give 15, men's volleyball can only give 4.5 because of title 9 and all the opportunities football gets to give out. Shane Davis told me this directly. Volleyball11 and volletrain are right, a lot of schools go around that scholarship limit with different methods. And also only official athletic scholarships count toward the 4.5 limit.
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