Do College Golfers Get Paid?
College golfers frequently have high profiles in the modern game, but do they get paid?
Because college golfers have not yet progressed to the professional game, it seems obvious that the answer to the question of whether they get paid would be an emphatic "no."
However, while that would have been more clear-cut not too many years ago, it has recently become more of a grey area.
College golfers still don't receive prize money in the overwhelming majority of NCAA events (although, per the USGA Amateur Status and NCAA Rules, they can accept prize money - including cash - up to $1,000 in scratch competitions, which mainly include events that don’t involve the golfers’ handicaps) but they do sometimes compete in professional events outside of the NCAA and can earn money there.
And, on July 1, 2021, the waters were muddied considerably when the NCAA began permitting its athletes to receive payments via NIL (name, image, likeness) agreements.
That decision proved contentious, to say the least. Some believe the decision should have been made earlier, and that college golfers should have the right to benefit financially, and not just the universities whose profiles are raised as a result of their achievements. ‘
On the other hand, there are concerns that the most successful players, or even those with larger social media reaches than others, could give too big an advantage while others struggle. Also, there are restrictions for international athletes due to visa issues, so could it ever be a level playing field?
Others worry that the spirit of the amateur game could be diminished when some players are well compensated even when retaining their amateur status.
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Regardless, the decision was made, and nowadays it means that even though college golfers can’t receive prize money for playing in NCAA events (which, in the NCAA's words, are prohibitions on pay-for-play), they can be paid for things including certain endorsements, sponsorships, personal appearances and social media promotions.
Players who have taken advantage of the NIL era during their college golf careers include John Daly II, who signed the very first NIL deal for a college athlete with Hooters less than a year after the NCAA rules were changed. Also in 2022, Stanford's Rose Zhang and Rachel Heck signed with Excel Sports Management to handle their NIL matters.
Pierceson and Parker Coody of the University of Texas were two others to benefit after they signed with launch monitor company Rapsodo while at the University of Texas at Austin.
Overall, on one level, college golf has remained true to the spirit of the amateur game – namely, that players aren’t compensated for their achievements on the course in the form of prize money at NCAA events. However, in more indirect ways, there are now opportunities to make good money as a college golfer that didn’t exist just a few years ago.
Mike has over 25 years of experience in journalism, including writing on a range of sports throughout that time, such as golf, football and cricket. Now a freelance staff writer for Golf Monthly, he is dedicated to covering the game's most newsworthy stories.
He has written hundreds of articles on the game, from features offering insights into how members of the public can play some of the world's most revered courses, to breaking news stories affecting everything from the PGA Tour and LIV Golf to developmental Tours and the amateur game.
Mike grew up in East Yorkshire and began his career in journalism in 1997. He then moved to London in 2003 as his career flourished, and nowadays resides in New Brunswick, Canada, where he and his wife raise their young family less than a mile from his local course.
Kevin Cook’s acclaimed 2007 biography, Tommy’s Honour, about golf’s founding father and son, remains one of his all-time favourite sports books.
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