Windsor Star

NCAA kicker clipped over YouTube videos

- MATT BONESTEEL

The University of Central Florida announced Monday that placekicke­r Donald De La Haye has been ruled ineligible after he refused to agree to the terms of an NCAA waiver that would allow him to continue posting YouTube videos and receive advertisin­g money from them.

“The waiver, which was granted, stated De La Haye could maintain his eligibilit­y and continue to monetize videos that did not reference his status as a student athlete or depict his football skill or ability,” the team said in a statement to the Orlando Sentinel.

“The waiver also allowed him to create videos that referenced his status as a student athlete or depict his football skill or ability if they were posted to a non-monetized account. De La Haye chose not to accept the conditions of the waiver and has therefore been ruled ineligible to compete in NCAA-sanctioned competitio­n.”

In a YouTube video posted Monday, De La Haye called the news “unbelievab­le” and said he was “torn apart inside.”

“Every time I step into that compliance building, I hear nothing but bad news,” said De La Haye, a marketing major who has said he was sending the money made from advertisin­g to his family. “I’m ruled ineligible because I refuse to demonetize my videos, something that I’ve worked so hard for.”

“They proposed me some rules and some conditions that they wanted me to follow, and I refused to,” De La Haye added. “I didn’t feel like they were fair.”

The NCAA released a statement, saying the kickoff specialist could have kept making YouTube videos so long as he didn’t mention his status as a football player. NCAA bylaw 12.4.4 states that an athlete “may establish his or her own business, provided the student athlete’s name, photograph, appearance or athletics reputation are not used to promote the business.”

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