Yes, FCS Football is an equivalency sport because they can give out partial scholarships. When we made the move last year, everyone on partials (like McElfresh) was bumped up to full scholarships.AppSt94 wrote:So FCS football is considered an equivalency sport? They give out partials so that fits the definition of equivalency. Another reason to move when we did.AppinVA wrote:I'm not certain if this has anything to do with anything, But all mentioned are head count sports. Women's Volleyball, women's tennis, and women's gymnastics are also head count sports (not sure if they have to sit out a year upon transferring), but I wonder if this will be where they eventually draw the line.huskie3 wrote:Are the transfer rules the same for say tennis as they are the revenue sports? It seems like I heard players in those sports don't have to sit out a year. Just need some clarification.
I'm fairly sure FB, MBB and WBB are the only ones that have to sit. Also think they are the only ones that have to give full schollies.
The others are called equivalency sports, where scholarships can be split among team members. Head count is one player, one full scholarship.
Here's a primer on scholarship limits, head count vs equivalency sports.
http://www.scholarshipstats.com/ncaalimits.html
However for sports like baseball, they can't give out a partial scholarship of less than 33% of a full ride and can't have more than (I believe) 30 players on some form of scholarship. That's because old coaches use to give 20-30 incoming freshmen enough money to buy books (book scholarship), come and try out and if they made the team, they would get a higher percentage and the ones who didn't make it would be dropped.