• Because of scholarship limits instituted by the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), many football teams do not offer scholarships to their
punters,
long snappers and
placekickers until they have become established producers. • Sometimes injury or outside issues can make unavailable several players of one position, resulting in the elevation of a walk-on to a featured player. • In other situations, a walk-on may so impress the coaching staff with their play on the scout team and in practice that they are rewarded with a scholarship and made a part of the regular depth chart. Often, it is the players who achieve success in this manner that are the inspiration for future walk-ons. One significant college football national award, the
Burlsworth Trophy—named after former walk-on
Arkansas Razorbacks guard
Brandon Burlsworth who earned second-team All-American in 1998—has been awarded since the
2010 season to the most outstanding player in the top-level
Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) who began his college career as a walk-on. The only two-time recipient of the Burlsworth Trophy,
Oklahoma Sooners quarterback
Baker Mayfield (2015 and 2016), won the 2017
Heisman Trophy. He began his college career as a walk-on for the
Texas Tech Red Raiders before transferring to Oklahoma, where he received all of the aforementioned awards, and eventually was selected with the
first overall pick of the
2018 NFL draft by the
Cleveland Browns. • Also, there are times where a walk-on will be a dependable member of the team's practice and scout teams for several years. If a team has an extra scholarship, it may award it to the player as a token of appreciation for their hard work and devotion to the team, although the player may never actually play in a game. • Finally, in rare cases, an established scholarship player may give up their scholarship and become a walk-on in order to open up the scholarship spot for another player. Three such cases in men's college basketball have received notoriety in recent years: • In the
2011–12 season, three
Louisville Cardinals scholarship players, most notably
Kyle Kuric and
Chris Smith, became walk-ons to bring the Cardinals scholarship totals down to the NCAA limit of 13. • In
2013–14, the
Creighton Bluejays forward
Doug McDermott became a walk-on after teammate
Grant Gibbs was granted a rare sixth year of eligibility by the NCAA, putting the Bluejays over the 13-scholarship limit. • In
2014–15, the
Xavier Musketeers starting center
Matt Stainbrook enrolled in the school's
Master of Business Administration (MBA) program and gave up his scholarship for his younger brother Tim, who had been a walk-on at Xavier the year before, in order to save their family a five-figure amount in school expenses. This led him to become a driver for the on-demand car service
Uber, which gained him significant notoriety during that season. ==Purpose==