South Carolina to guarantee four-year scholarships for some sports
COLUMBIA, S.C. -- South Carolina will guarantee four-year scholarships to its qualifying NCAA sports.
The school sent out letters to its 383 athletes Thursday, 121 of whom will receive the full four-year guarantee when renewing their scholarships. Those athletes are in what the NCAA calls "headcount" sports of football, men's and women's basketball, women's tennis and volleyball where each player receives a full scholarship.
South Carolina's other teams are classified as "equivalency" sports where coaches divide up a set number of scholarships among their roster. Senior associate athletic director Charles Bloom said the school is exploring how to create a similar process for them.
The school said scholarships would increase to include full cost of attendance upon NCAA approval.
"We want to give people a snapshot of what a major university can provide to its student-athletes," said Fran Person, a former senior adviser to Vice President Joe Biden hired last month as a point-of-contact for athlete welfare at South Carolina.
South Carolina's other teams -- which represents about two-thirds of the student-athletes who receive financial aid -- are classified as "equivalency" sports where coaches divide up a set number of scholarships among their roster, such as baseball having to spread 11.7 scholarships between up to three dozen players.
Other Schools, including Indiana and Maryland of the Big Ten, have also announced guaranteed scholarships for their athletes.
Person said the South Carolina is the first in the SEC to publicly mandate four-year guaranteed scholarships.
"We want to be out front with what's going on," South Carolina athletic director Ray Tanner said.
South Carolina began looking at possibly guaranteeing multi-year scholarships after the NCAA approved rules that let the Power 5 conferences -- the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac 12 and SEC -- unilaterally change some rules that have applied to all Division I schools for years.
South Carolina and the 64 others in those five leagues will also benefit from a new, weighted voting system on legislation covering the 350 schools in Division I.
The only ways South Carolina athletes can now lose scholarships are if they voluntarily leave, become ineligible or violate university or athletic department rules or voluntarily leave the program.
Person said South Carolina would continue giving athletes who leave in good standing the chance to re-enroll and complete their college degrees.
The cost of athletic scholarships at South Carolina ranges from $21,461 for an in-state student living on campus to $41,121 for an out-of-state student living off campus.