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Patriot League to Allow Merit Aid Awards for Football

Feb. 13, 2012

Patriot League Football Athletic Aid FAQ Sheet

Center Valley, Pa. - The Patriot League Council of Presidents endorsed a policy that will allow athletic merit aid for the sport of football, beginning with the class entering school in the fall of 2013, it was announced Monday.

"The Council of Presidents' decision to adjust the current need-based model of financial aid in football, which has been in effect since the founding of the League in 1986, comes after extensive study and discussion of alternative models and a thorough evaluation of the benefits and potential costs associated with athletic merit aid in the sport. The decision reflects the Presidents' shared vision and shared commitment to the stability and long-term positioning of the League and to its strength, competitiveness and quality," said Daniel H. Weiss, Chair of the Patriot League Council of Presidents and President of Lafayette College.

"This approach for awarding athletic merit aid to football student-athletes will allow our member schools flexibility to determine the most effective use of their financial aid resources to attract highly-qualified Division I scholar-athletes in a very competitive academic and athletic marketplace," said Patriot League Executive Director Carolyn Schlie Femovich. "The introduction of this financial aid model for football will strengthen the Patriot League's ability to compete for outstanding student-athletes while continuing to uphold the high academic standards of the League and its member institutions."

Starting with the class entering school in the fall of 2013, each school will be permitted to award no more than the equivalent of 15 athletic financial aid awards each year to incoming football student-athletes, including transfer student-athletes. The total amount of all countable financial aid awarded to all football student-athletes may not exceed 60 equivalencies in any year.

Currently, it is permissible for Patriot League institutions to offer athletic and academic merit aid to student-athletes in the League's other 22 sports. However, it is an institutional decision regarding the amount and sports for which athletic aid is made available. Since its inception in 1986, Patriot League football was considered a separate entity and had maintained a need-limited approach with financial aid. With the permissive aid approach, institutions will now be able to determine the most effective way to award financial aid in football.

The recently completed 2011 football season marked the 25th anniversary campaign for Patriot League football and its programs have successfully competed in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). The Patriot League has held an automatic qualifying berth into the NCAA tournament since 1997 and continues to meet the standards to be eligible.

Bucknell University, Colgate University, College of the Holy Cross, Lafayette College and Lehigh University are founding members of the Patriot League that sponsor football, while Fordham University and Georgetown University compete in football as associate members. The other full members of the League are American University, U.S. Military Academy and U.S. Naval Academy. These institutions are among the oldest and most prestigious academic institutions in the nation.

The Patriot League's member institutions consistently rank among the top Division I programs in the NCAA Graduation Rates Report and are recognized nationally for the effective integration of Division I athletics into the educational mission of the institution.

Fordham University started awarding merit-based aid for football beginning with the class that entered the fall of 2010, the first time that Fordham has awarded merit aid for football students-athletes since 1954.

"We are very pleased that other Patriot League teams will be joining the Rams in moving toward a permissive stance regarding financial aid for football student athletes," said Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham. "We have found at Fordham that this approach has allowed our staff and coaches to recruit academically and athletically talented student athletes in a more efficient and effective manner. In time, we believe this policy will help make our team, and our individual student athletes, more competitive on and off the gridiron."

"I think this is a great decision for the Patriot League," said Frank McLaughlin, Fordham's executive director of athletics. "We look forward to continuing our strong relationship with the League, and helping to make the Patriot League one of the top football conferences in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision. Merit-based aid has allowed Fordham to renew rivalries with Army and Villanova and to enhance our schedule with the addition of schools such as Navy and Connecticut and I'm sure that the other Patriot League schools will find the same benefits."

Fordham head football coach Joe Moorhead


The move to merit-based aid has helped Fordham schedule games with NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) schools that offer merit aid as well as Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) institutions. Last fall, Fordham played both Connecticut and Army from the NCAA FBS and has scheduled games with Villanova (FCS) in 2012 and Army in 2014 and 2015.

"We are very excited by the Patriot League's decision to offer merit-based aid for football," said first-year Fordham head coach Joe Moorhead. "Even though this is my first year at Fordham, I have seen how awarding merit-based aid has greatly increased the quality of student-athletes that we are able to recruit. I believe that this decision will benefit the entire Patriot League."

The Rams are tentatively scheduled to open their 113th season of varsity football on Thursday, August 30th, when they host the Lock Haven University Bald Eagles on Jack Coffey Field. Fordham is entering its 23rd season as a member of the NCAA FCS Patriot League.

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