Sunday, May 17, 2020

What Is a College Booster

Broadly speaking, a booster is someone who supports a school sports team. Of course, college athletics have all kinds of fans and supporters, including students who enjoy a fall weekend football game, alumni who travel the country watching womens basketball  or community members who just like to see the home team win. Those people arent all necessarily boosters. Generally, you would be considered a booster once you have in some way made a financial contribution to a schools athletic department or been involved in promoting a schools athletic organizations.   Defining Booster in a General Sense As far as college sports go, a booster is a very specific kind of athletics supporter, and NCAA has a lot of rules about what they can and cannot do (more on that later). At the same time, people use the term to describe all sorts of people who may not fit the NCAAs definition of a booster. In general conversation, a booster can mean someone who supports a college athletic team by attending games, donating money or being involved in volunteer work with the team (or even the larger athletic department). Alumni,  parents of current or former students, community members or even  professors or other college employees may be casually referred to as boosters.   Rules About Boosters A booster, according to the NCAA, is a representative of athletic interest. That covers a lot of people, including people who have made a donation to get season tickets, promoted or participated in groups promoting a schools athletics programs, donated to the athletics department, contributed to student-athlete recruitment or provided assistance to a prospect or student-athlete. Once a person has done any of these things, which the NCAA describes in detail on its website, they are forever-labeled a booster. That means they have to follow strict guidelines about what boosters can or cannot do in terms of making financial contributions to and contacting prospects and student-athletes. For example: The NCAA allows boosters to attend a prospects sporting events and tell the college about the potential recruit, but the booster cant talk to the player. A booster can also help a student-athlete get a job, as long as the athlete is paid for the work theyre doing and at the going rate for such work. Basically, giving prospective players or current athletes special treatment could get a booster in trouble. The NCAA can fine and otherwise punish a school whose boosters violate the rules, and many universities have found themselves on the receiving end of such sanctions. And its not just colleges—high school booster clubs have to follow local athletics associations rules, as well as  tax laws regarding fundraising. So if youre using the term booster in any kind of sports-related context, make sure youre clear on which definition youre using—and which one your audience thinks youre using. The general, casual use of the term can be quite different than its legal definition.

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