http://www.sbnation.com/college-football/2015/2/25/8107233/silas-nacita-baylor-football-ncaa-eligibility
Once-homeless Baylor player ineligible, allegedly for accepting a place to live
By Pete Volk
Baylor fans woke up Wednesday to find star defensive end Shawn Oakman upset with the NCAA for an alleged wronging of one of his teammates. The first-team All-Big 12 player took to Twitter to express frustration.
Shawn oakman @PA2BU
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Yesterday,the first day of spring ball a player on my team was released from the team for accepting a place to live b/c he did not have the
8:36 AM – 25 Feb 2015
Shawn oakman @PA2BU
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Means to do it his own,he was poor and needed help he has been sleeping on friends floors just to have a chance to earn a scholarship #NCAA
8:38 AM – 25 Feb 2015
Shawn oakman @PA2BU
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Who is the #NCAA to take someone’s dreams from them b/c they can’t afford to live
8:41 AM – 25 Feb 2015
The NCAA hasn’t said anything, but a bit more clarity came from ESPN’s David Smoak. The player in question is walk-on running back Silas Nacita, nicknamed “Salsa Nacho” after an autocorrect incident.
David Smoak @DavidSmoak
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Getting word #Baylor RB @Salsa_Nacho is no longer on the team roster. Tweets from teammates angry with the NCAA. More details to come.
9:15 AM – 25 Feb 2015
David Smoak @DavidSmoak
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Another note on @Salsa_Nacho, he isn’t on roster and can’t practice until he works out some “issues” on eligibility, but he can return.
10:06 AM – 25 Feb 2015
David Smoak @DavidSmoak
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And, I get impression there’s no doubt #Baylor coaching staff will welcome @Salsa_Nacho back with open arms if his eligibility is cleared.
10:10 AM – 25 Feb 2015
A Sports Illustrated profile by Ken Rodriguez during the season told Nacita’s story. Despite living on couches as a senior at Bakersfield High School, he earned a 4.1 GPA and went on to play football at Cornell. The running back had tried to enroll at Baylor in summer 2013, but was refused admittance when he was unable to get a loan. He enrolled at McLennan Community College instead, waiting tables and saving up his money.
Nacita walked on at Baylor in June, homeless and hungry, sleeping on friends’ floors and taking pictures of book pages from the campus store to study on his phone. He still made Academic All-Big 12. As a sophomore last season, Nacita ran 31 times for 191 yards with three touchdowns and also recorded nine tackles.
Silas Nacita @Salsa_Nacho
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All I wanted to do was go to school and play the game I loved.
11:29 AM – 25 Feb 2015
Baylor athletic director Ian McCaw released a statement.
Silas Nacita will not be a part of the football program moving forward due to rules violations that impact his eligibility. We appreciate his contributions to Baylor football and wish him well as he completes his studies.
Because he was a walk-on and not a scholarship player, room and board wasn’t one of his benefits for being on the team. Our Daily Bears notes the irony:
I’m not sure what the NCAA expects athletes to do in this situation, where they don’t have an athletic scholarship but are working hard to get one, beyond just not being athletes in the first place. If he was a regular student, nobody would care where he slept or if he paid for it. But because he’s a football player and not on scholarship, he’s held to a higher standard? Unless it’s the school paying for it surreptitiously in an effort to skirt the NCAA’s scholarship limits, why do they even care?
Whether this is the full story or not, how NCAA rules should impact homeless players has become an issue in recent years.
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This topic was modified 9 years, 10 months ago by JackPMiller.