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All In The Game: Athletes And Schools Tackle Tougher NCAA Academic Requirements

Coach David Masterson (front left) stands on the practice field at Northeast High School in East Baton Rouge Parish before a snap.
Amy Jeffries
/
Southern Education Desk
Coach David Masterson (front left) stands on the practice field at Northeast High School in East Baton Rouge Parish before a snap.
Coach David Masterson (front left) stands on the practice field at Northeast High School in East Baton Rouge Parish before a snap.
Credit Amy Jeffries / Southern Education Desk
/
Southern Education Desk
Coach David Masterson (front left) stands on the practice field at Northeast High School in East Baton Rouge Parish before a snap.

When it comes to Division I football, Southern states including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana, produce the largest number of recruits per capita.

New NCAA rules take effect for college athletes next fall. A 2.0 GPA and a decent ACT score won’t be enough anymore. To avoid the bench, freshmen will have to come in with a 2.3 GPA in core classes — reading, math, science, and social studies. And players in high school — where standards are generally lower — are feeling it.

Even with a wad of chewing tobacco in his cheek, Coach David Masterson is clear.

“I don’t care what the NCAA requirements are because I don’t view myself as a farm system to them,” Masterson says.

The NCAA’s “2.3 or Take a Knee” poster still hangs above the coach’s desk.

Every three weeks, Masterson tapes notes to his players’ lockers at Northeast High School in East Baton Rouge Parish letting them know how they’re doing.

“2.6, pretty good so far,” “3.0, nice job Bebe,” “you’ve gotta pull this up for a 2.0 Monte,” he says to a few of his players.

If their grades fall below a C average — they can’t play, under a Louisiana High School Athletic Association rule. There are similar rules in most states.

Texas Tech Professor Angela Lumpkin found the regulations in Kansas did focus the minds of high school athletes there.

“Because I want to play, I’m going to do what I need to do to perform in the classroom, so I keep that right,” Lumpkin says.

Of the high school athletes in the Kansas cohort Lumpkin studied, 97.6 percent got a diploma in 2012. Only 89.5 percent of their non-athlete classmates did.

That’s what Coach Masterson really cares about — that his players graduate from Northeast, where a quarter of all students don’t make it in four years.

On the practice field, they’re thinking about playing college football at places such as Alabama or LSU.

Credit Kelly Tate / Southern Education Desk
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Southern Education Desk

At Dutchtown High in Geismar, Louisiana, senior defensive back Rickey Thomas is dreaming of Division I too. He’s been hearing from his coach for the last three years that to play in college he needs a 2.3 GPA.

“I thought I wasn’t gonna make it when I heard it the first time. I went to summer school and I retook some of my old classes from 9th grade that I barely passed,” Thomas says.

Coach Benny Saia says Thomas has really pulled himself up by the bootstraps.

“He worked his tail off. He’s given himself a chance,” Saia says.

And so did another Dutchtown player – Eddie Lacy.

Coach Saia doesn’t think Lacy would have hit that 2.3 mark, and might never have had the chance to make the millions he’s making in the NFL.

“He wouldn’t have I don’t think. And he’s making way more money than me and you right now,” Saia says.

Walter Harrison, president of the University of Hartford, chaired the NCAA committee that came up with that 2.3 GPA rule.

“We’re talking about having a C+ average. Having that kind of average will help you graduate, and even though you may be hellbent on being a professional player, you may eventually find that that’s not where you’re going to be and then you’ll be well prepared to do something else,” Harrison says.

In his years of coaching, Benny Saia has seen the NCAA raise the academic bar more than once.

“I just hope we don’t raise the bar so much that we eliminate kids from having a chance to reach the bar,” Saia says.

This report is supported by a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Tomorrow, we look at academic support for college athletes.

Copyright 2015 WRKF

Amy started her career in public radio at WNPR in Hartford, CT more than a decade ago. NPR flew her in to Baton Rouge to help WRKF cover the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina while she was still based in the North. Here she found her journalistic calling.